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Transient liquid-crystal technique used to produce high-resolution convective heat-transfer-coefficient mapsIn this transient technique the preheated isothermal model wall simulates the classic one-dimensional, semi-infinite wall heat transfer conduction problem. By knowing the temperature of the air flowing through the model, the initial temperature of the model wall, and the surface cooling rate measured at any location with time (using the fast-response liquid-crystal patterns recorded on video tape), the heat transfer coefficient can be calculated for the color isothermal pattern produced. Although the test was run transiently, the heat transfer coefficients are for the steady-state case. The upstream thermal boundary condition was considered to be isothermal. This transient liquid-crystal heat-transfer technique was used in a transient air tunnel in which a square-inlet, 3-to-1 exit transition duct was placed. The duct was preheated prior to allowing room temperature air to be suddenly drawn through it. The resulting isothermal contours on the duct surfaces were revealed using a surface coating of thermochromic liquid crystals that display distinctive colors at particular temperatures. A video record was made of the temperature and time data for all points on the duct surfaces during each test. The duct surfaces were uniformly heated using two heating systems: the first was an automatic temperature-controlled heater blanket completely surrounding the test duct like an oven, and the second was an internal hot-air loop through the inside of the test duct. The hot-air loop path was confined inside the test duct by insulated heat dams located at the inlet and exit ends of the test duct. A recirculating fan moved hot air into the duct inlet, through the duct, out of the duct exit, through the oven, and back to the duct inlet. The temperature nonuniformity of the test duct model wall was held very small. Test results are reported for two inlet Reynolds numbers of 200,000 and 1,150,000 (based on the square-inlet hydraulic diameter) and two free-stream turbulence intensities of about 1 percent, which is typical of wind tunnels, and up to 20 percent (using a grid), which is typical of real engine conditions.
Document ID
19930014215
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Hippensteele, Steven A.
(NASA Lewis Research Center Cleveland, OH, United States)
Poinsatte, Philip E.
(NASA Lewis Research Center Cleveland, OH, United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
August 1, 1993
Subject Category
Fluid Mechanics And Heat Transfer
Report/Patent Number
NAS 1.15:106083
E-7702
NASA-TM-106083
Meeting Information
Meeting: 1993 National Heat Transfer Conference
Location: Atlanta, GA
Country: United States
Start Date: August 8, 1993
End Date: August 11, 1993
Sponsors: ASME
Accession Number
93N23404
Funding Number(s)
PROJECT: RTOP 505-62-52
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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