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Electrically heated tube investigation of cooling channel geometry effects
Author(s) -
Michaël Meyer
Publication year - 1995
Publication title -
31st joint propulsion conference and exhibit
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.1995-2500
Subject(s) - tube (container) , materials science , channel (broadcasting) , mechanics , computer cooling , mechanical engineering , electrical engineering , thermal management of electronic devices and systems , composite material , physics , engineering
The results of an experimental investigation on the combined effects of cooling channel aspect ratio and curvature for rocket engines are presented. Symmetrically heated tubes with average heat fluxes up to 1.7 MW/m(exp 2) were used. The coolant was gaseous nitrogen at an inlet temperature of 280 K (500 R) and inlet pressures up to 1.0 x 10(exp 7) N/m(exp 2) (1500 psia). Two different tube geometries were tested: a straight, circular cross-section tube, and an aspect-ratio 10 cross-section tube with a 45 deg bend. The circular tube results are compared to classical models from the literature as validation of the system. The curvature effect data from the curved aspect-ratio 10 tube compare favorably to the empirical equations available in the literature for low aspect ratio tubes. This latter results suggest that thermal stratification of the coolant due to diminished curvature effect mixing may not be an issue for high aspect-ratio cooling channels.

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