pwildfire
Mechanical
- Feb 28, 2012
- 35
Hi guys,
I am examining a situation in which an aluminum engine part is cooled by forced flow of oil. The surface area cannot be modified, and additional flow rate of oil yields diminishing returns in (measured) heat rejection. My impression is that the limiting factor is heat flux at the interface from the aluminum part to the oil.
My question is what factors determine the heat flux at the surface? I know local HT coefficient equations I have always used tend to ignore this and focus on bulk conductivities, but how true is this assumption? For example, in this situation to calculate local HT coefficient, one would use the conductivity of aluminum and the convective coefficient of the oil. But presumably the aluminum surface is covered with a thin oxide layer. AlO2 has about 1/10 the thermal conductivity of aluminum. Does this have an effect on the heat flux to the fluid? Could heat transfer be significantly improved by applying a surface coating to the aluminum part which has a high HT coefficient and does not form a surface oxide?
Additionally, I have just been reading a paper which describes a large difference in surface heat flux between oils with different additive compositions. How does surface heat flux effect the overall heat transfer (ie heat exchanger equations)? My assumption would be that the convective HT coefficient for all these oils is very similar, but surface effects apparently vary by a factor of 4 in some cases.
I don't actually need to be able to calculate the heat rejection, I can measure it if needed, I just want to understand the physics well enough to make informed assumptions, and right now my understanding of the equations seems to leave out some factors which may be potentially important.
Thanks for any insight you can provide.
Pat
I am examining a situation in which an aluminum engine part is cooled by forced flow of oil. The surface area cannot be modified, and additional flow rate of oil yields diminishing returns in (measured) heat rejection. My impression is that the limiting factor is heat flux at the interface from the aluminum part to the oil.
My question is what factors determine the heat flux at the surface? I know local HT coefficient equations I have always used tend to ignore this and focus on bulk conductivities, but how true is this assumption? For example, in this situation to calculate local HT coefficient, one would use the conductivity of aluminum and the convective coefficient of the oil. But presumably the aluminum surface is covered with a thin oxide layer. AlO2 has about 1/10 the thermal conductivity of aluminum. Does this have an effect on the heat flux to the fluid? Could heat transfer be significantly improved by applying a surface coating to the aluminum part which has a high HT coefficient and does not form a surface oxide?
Additionally, I have just been reading a paper which describes a large difference in surface heat flux between oils with different additive compositions. How does surface heat flux effect the overall heat transfer (ie heat exchanger equations)? My assumption would be that the convective HT coefficient for all these oils is very similar, but surface effects apparently vary by a factor of 4 in some cases.
I don't actually need to be able to calculate the heat rejection, I can measure it if needed, I just want to understand the physics well enough to make informed assumptions, and right now my understanding of the equations seems to leave out some factors which may be potentially important.
Thanks for any insight you can provide.
Pat