Paper presented at the 5th International Conference on Heat Transfer, Fluid Mechanics and Thermodynamics, South Africa, 1-4 July, 2007.
Transient conjugated heat transfer in thick walled pipes
for thermally developing laminar flow is investigated involving
two dimensional wall and axial fluid conduction. The problem is
solved numerically by a finite difference method for
hydrodynamically developed flow in a two regional pipe,
initially isothermal in which the upstream region is insulated
and the downstream region is subjected to a suddenly applied
uniform heat flux. A parametric study is done to analyze the
effects of four defining parameters namely, wall thickness ratio,
wall-to-fluid thermal conductivity ratio, wall-to-fluid thermal
diffusivity ratio and the Peclet number. The results are given by
non-dimensional interfacial heat flux values, and it is observed
that, heat transfer characteristics are strongly dependent on the
parameter values.