Faculty Publications
Permanent URI for this communityhttps://idr.nitk.ac.in/handle/123456789/18736
Publications by NITK Faculty
Browse
11 results
Search Results
Item Transient analysis of subcritical/supercritical carbon dioxide based natural circulation loops with end heat exchangers: Numerical studies(Elsevier Ltd, 2014) Yadav, A.K.; Ram Gopal, M.; Bhattacharyya, S.Transient analysis of carbon dioxide based natural circulation loop (NCL) with end heat exchangers has been carried out. Subcritical and supercritical phases of CO2 are considered with operating pressures in the range of 50-100 bar for an operating temperature range of 323 K to 363 K. Studies are carried out for various loop tilt angles, different initial conditions, and different water mass flow rates. Results: are obtained for various inlet temperatures of water in the hot heat exchanger while keeping the inlet temperature of cooling water in the cold heat exchanger fixed. Effect of tilting the loop in XY and YZ planes on transient as well as steady state behaviour of loop are also studied. Validation of simulation results against experimental and numerical results reported in the literature in terms of modified Grashof number (Grm) and Reynolds number (Re) show good agreement. © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.Item Effect of tilt angle on subcritical/supercritical carbon dioxide-based natural circulation loop with isothermal source and sink\(American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) infocentral@asme.org, 2016) Yadav, A.K.; Ram Gopal, M.R.; Bhattacharyya, S.In recent years, a growing popularity of carbon dioxide (CO2) as a secondary fluid has been witnessed in both forced as well as in natural circulation loops (NCLs). This may be attributed to the favorable thermophysical properties of CO2 in addition to the environmental benignity of the fluid. However, an extensive literature review shows that studies on CO2-based NCLs are very limited. Also, most of the studies on NCLs do not consider the three-dimensional variation of the field variables. In the present work, threedimensional computational fluid dynamics (CFD) models of a NCL with isothermal source and sink have been developed to study the effect of tilt angle in different planes. Studies have been carried out employing subcritical (liquid and vapor) as well as supercritical phase of CO2 as loop fluid at different operating pressures and temperatures. Results are obtained for a range of tilt angles of the loop, and a significant effect is observed on heat transfer, mass flow rate, and stability of the loop. It was also found that changing the orientation of the loop could be an elegant and effective solution to the flow instability problem of NCLs.Item Optimum Operating Conditions for Subcritical/Supercritical Fluid-Based Natural Circulation Loops(American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) infocentral@asme.org, 2016) Yadav, A.K.; Bhattacharyya, S.; Ram Gopal, M.R.Natural circulation loop (NCL) is simple and reliable due to the absence of moving components and is preferred in applications where safety is of foremost concern, such as nuclear power plants and high-pressure thermal power plants. In the present study, optimum operating conditions based on the maximum heat transfer rate in NCLs have been obtained for subcritical as well as supercritical fluids. In recent years, there is a growing interest in the use of carbon dioxide (CO2) as loop fluid in NCLs for a variety of heat transfer applications due to its excellent thermophysical environmentally benign properties. In the present study, three-dimensional (3D) computational fluid dynamics (CFD) analysis of a CO2-based NCL with isothermal source and sink has been carried out. Results show that the heat transfer rate is much higher in the case of supercritical phase (if operated near pseudocritical region) than the subcritical phase. In the subcritical option, higher heat transfer rate is obtained in the case of liquid operated near saturation condition. Correlations for optimum operating condition are obtained for a supercritical CO2-based NCL in terms of reduced temperature and reduced pressure so that they can be employed for a wide variety of fluids operating in supercritical region. Correlations are also validated with different loop fluids. These results are expected to help design superior optimal NCLs for critical applications. © 2016 by ASME.Item Computation of fluid flow in double sided cross-shaped lid-driven cavities using Lattice Boltzmann method(Elsevier Ltd, 2018) Bhopalam, S.B.; Arumuga Perumal, D.A.; Yadav, A.K.This work implements Lattice Boltzmann method to compute flows in double-sided cross-shaped lid-driven cavities. Firstly, a complicated geometry which is a symmetrized version of the staggered lid-driven cavity namely, the double-sided cross-shaped lid-driven cavity with antiparallel uniform wall motion is studied employing Single as well as Two Relaxation time models. The streamline patterns and vorticity contours obtained for low to moderate Reynolds numbers (150–1000) are compared with published results and found to be in good accordance. Next, this code is extended to simulate flows in a double-sided cross-shaped lid-driven cavity with parallel uniform wall motion. The effect of three dimensionality is also studied for low Reynolds numbers. Lattice Boltzmann method is then used to investigate the oscillating double-sided cross-shaped lid-driven cavity with antiparallel and parallel wall motions. The movement and formation of primary and secondary vortices have been well captured with the variation of Reynolds numbers and oscillating frequencies for uniform and oscillating wall motions. Reasonable agreements with the established results have been observed for the double-sided cross-shaped cavity with uniform wall motions, while new results have been obtained in the case of oscillating wall motions. © 2018 Elsevier Masson SASItem Study of adiabatic obstacles on natural convection in a square cavity using lattice boltzmann method(American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) infocentral@asme.org, 2019) Karki, P.; Yadav, A.K.; Arumuga Perumal, D.A.This study involves the effect of adiabatic obstacles on twodimensional natural convection in a square enclosure using lattice Boltzmann method (LBM). The enclosure embodies squareshaped adiabatic obstacles with one, two, and four in number. The single obstacle in cavity is centrally placed, whereas for other two configurations, a different arrangement has been made such that the core fluid zone is not hampered. The four boundaries of the cavity considered here consist of two adiabatic horizontal walls and two differentially heated vertical walls. The current study covers the range of Rayleigh number (10 3 ? Ra ? 10 6 ) and a fixed Prandtl number of 0.71 for all cases. The effect of size of obstacle is studied in detail for single obstacle. It is found that the average heat transfer along the hot wall increases with the increase in size of obstacle until it reaches an optimum value and then with further increase in size, the heat transfer rate deteriorates. Study is carried out to delineate the comparison between the presences of obstacle in and out of the conduction dominant zone in the cavity. The number of obstacles (two and four) outside of this core zone shows that heat transfer decreases despite the obstacle being adiabatic in nature. © 2019 by ASME.Item Effect of bioethanol–diesel blends, exhaust gas recirculation rate and injection timing on performance, emission and combustion characteristics of a common rail diesel engine(Taylor and Francis Ltd. michael.wagreich@univie.ac.at, 2019) Lamani, V.T.; Baliga M, A.U.; Yadav, A.K.; Kumar, G.N.This investigation is focused on the effect of exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) and injection timing on the performance, combustion and exhaust emission characteristics of common rail direct injection (CRDI) engine fueled with bioethanol-blended diesel using computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulation. Simulation is carried out for various EGR rates (0, 10, 20 and 30%), two different injection timings, and two different bioethanol–diesel blends (10 and 20%) at injection pressure. The equivalence ratio is kept constant in all the cases of bioethanol–diesel blends. The results indicate that the mean CO formation and ignition delay increase, whereas mean NO formation and in-cylinder temperature decrease, with increase in the EGR rate. Further, with an increase in percentage of the bioethanol blends, CO and soot formation decrease as compared to neat diesel. A significant increase in in-cylinder pressure (15%) is found at 14° before top dead centre (BTDC) compared to 9° BTDC, which leads to an increase in indicated thermal efficiency of 4% for neat diesel at 30% EGR. In the present study, maximum indicated thermal efficiency is obtained in the case of 10 and 20% bioethanol–diesel blend, and remains constant for all EGR rates considered in the study. Obtained results are validated with the available literature data and indicate good agreement. © 2017, © 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.Item Stability enhancement of supercritical CO2 based natural circulation loop using a modified Tesla valve(Elsevier B.V., 2020) Wahidi, T.; Chandavar, R.A.; Yadav, A.K.This article deals with the comparative investigation of instability phenomenon in supercritical CO2 based regular natural circulation loop and a new modified Tesla natural circulation loop. Two-dimensional computational fluid dynamics simulation is carried out for square loops. Fluid flow behaviour and performance of both the loops are determined over a range of pressures (80–100 bar) and heat inputs (500–2000 W). Results show that the use of a modified Tesla valve leads to better stabilization for all supercritical pressures and heat inputs. It is also found that loop with Tesla mitigates the temperature and velocity oscillations without reducing the heat transfer performance. A good agreement with existing correlations is also obtained in the present study. The unidirectional fluid flow circulation achieved in loop with Tesla valve, makes it an efficient technique to combat instability. © 2020 Elsevier B.V.Item Supercritical CO2 flow instability in natural circulation loop: CFD analysis(Elsevier Ltd, 2021) Wahidi, T.; Chandavar, R.A.; Yadav, A.K.Three-dimensional computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulation on a supercritical CO2 based natural circulation loop (scCO2-NCL) is carried out to explore the effects of various parameters (i.e., pressure and heat inputs) on the loop's transient and stability behaviour. Results show that for supercritical CO2, there is a threshold point that decides the flow's nature. Lower than threshold heat inputs flow shows repetitive-reversal flow while at higher heat input the flow changes to stable or single-direction flow. With an increase in heat input, the system attains stability for a given operating pressure. In addition, a possible mechanism for continuous flow oscillation and measurement of instability with different pressure in unstable loops is also proposed in this study. It is found that the Nusselt number decreases with an increase in operating pressure for given heat input. Obtained simulation results are validated with the two existing correlations and found a good agreement. © 2021 Elsevier LtdItem Comparative studies on air, water and nanofluids based Rayleigh–Benard natural convection using lattice Boltzmann method: CFD and exergy analysis(Springer Science and Business Media B.V., 2022) Karki, P.; Arumuga Perumal, D.A.; Yadav, A.K.The present study incorporates laminar natural convection and entropy generation in Rayleigh–Benard (R–B) convection with air, water and alumina–water nanofluid as working fluids. The fluid flow and energy equations are solved using D2Q9 and D2Q5 LBM models, respectively. The effects of Rayleigh numbers (Ra = 5 × 103, 104, 105) and volume fractions (? = 0 to 0.08) of nanoparticles on heat transfer and irreversibility are investigated. Results show that the heat transfer evaluated based on Nusselt number is enhanced due to addition of nanoparticles in the base fluid. The maximum enhancement in Nusselt number is found to be 13.93% at Ra = 105 with 8% of nanoparticle in base fluid. The various irreversibilities considered in this study are thermal, fluid flow and total irreversibility, where fluid flow and total irreversibilities in the study depend on irreversibility ratio. The irreversibility ratios taken into account are 10–2, 10–3, 10–4 and 10–5. One facet of study shows the deviation in onset of critical Rayleigh number for air is 1.58%. The other facet indicates dimensionless heat transfer, fluid flow and total irreversibility decrease with the increase in volume fraction of nanoparticles in the base fluid. The analyzed results of irreversibilities are presented in normalized form. In addition, dimensionless entropy generation maps and Bejan number contours are also plotted. © 2021, Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest, Hungary.Item Thermo-hydraulic and exergetic performance of a cost-effective solar air heater: CFD and experimental study(Elsevier Ltd, 2022) Nidhul, K.; Yadav, A.K.; Anish, S.; Arunachala, U.C.An experimental and computational fluid dynamics (CFD) study is carried out to investigate the impact of secondary flow strengthening the thermo-hydraulic performance of discrete multiple inclined baffles in a flat plate solar air heater (SAH) with semi-cylindrical sidewalls. Initially, for a fixed relative baffle height (Rh = 0.1), the relative baffle pitch (Rp) for continuous baffles is varied in the range of 0.6–1 to obtain the optimum baffle pitch for 6000 p. A maximum thermo-hydraulic performance of 2.69 is obtained for the gap at the trailing apex. The proposed design has a higher collector efficiency, 55–70%, compared to the ribbed rectangular SAH design exhibiting 30–55%. With lower exergy losses, the present SAH design has higher exergetic efficiency (1.5%–2.2%)than ribbed rectangular SAH (0.9%–1.7%) for the range of Re studied. Further, at low Re, the present SAH design has a higher coefficient of performance, indicating that it is cost-effective than ribbed rectangular SAH designs. © 2021 Elsevier Ltd
