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    Bejan’s Heatlines and Masslines for Convection Visualization and Analysis

    Source: Applied Mechanics Reviews:;2006:;volume( 059 ):;issue: 003::page 126
    Author:
    V. A. Costa
    DOI: 10.1115/1.2177684
    Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    Abstract: Heatlines were proposed in 1983 by Kimura and Bejan (1983) as adequate tools for visualization and analysis of convection heat transfer. The masslines, their equivalent to apply to convection mass transfer, were proposed in 1987 by Trevisan and Bejan. These visualization and analysis tools proved to be useful, and their application in the fields of convective heat and/or mass transfer is still increasing. When the heat function and/or the mass function are made dimensionless in an adequate way, their values are closely related with the Nusselt and/or Sherwood numbers. The basics of the method were established in the 1980(s), and some novelties were subsequently added in order to increase the applicability range and facility of use of such visualization tools. Main steps included their use in unsteady problems, their use in polar cylindrical and spherical coordinate systems, development of similarity expressions for the heat function in laminar convective boundary layers, application of the method to turbulent flow problems, unification of the streamline, heatline, and massline methods (involving isotropic or anisotropic media), and the extension and unification of the method to apply to reacting flows. The method is now well established, and the efforts made towards unification resulted in very useful tools for visualization and analysis, which can be easily included in software packages for numerical heat transfer and fluid flow. This review describes the origins and evolution of the heatlines and masslines as visualization and analysis tools, from their first steps to the present.
    keyword(s): Flow (Dynamics) , Heat , Visualization , Heatlines AND Equations ,
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      Bejan’s Heatlines and Masslines for Convection Visualization and Analysis

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    contributor authorV. A. Costa
    date accessioned2017-05-09T00:18:26Z
    date available2017-05-09T00:18:26Z
    date copyrightMay, 2006
    date issued2006
    identifier issn0003-6900
    identifier otherAMREAD-25867#126_1.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/132952
    description abstractHeatlines were proposed in 1983 by Kimura and Bejan (1983) as adequate tools for visualization and analysis of convection heat transfer. The masslines, their equivalent to apply to convection mass transfer, were proposed in 1987 by Trevisan and Bejan. These visualization and analysis tools proved to be useful, and their application in the fields of convective heat and/or mass transfer is still increasing. When the heat function and/or the mass function are made dimensionless in an adequate way, their values are closely related with the Nusselt and/or Sherwood numbers. The basics of the method were established in the 1980(s), and some novelties were subsequently added in order to increase the applicability range and facility of use of such visualization tools. Main steps included their use in unsteady problems, their use in polar cylindrical and spherical coordinate systems, development of similarity expressions for the heat function in laminar convective boundary layers, application of the method to turbulent flow problems, unification of the streamline, heatline, and massline methods (involving isotropic or anisotropic media), and the extension and unification of the method to apply to reacting flows. The method is now well established, and the efforts made towards unification resulted in very useful tools for visualization and analysis, which can be easily included in software packages for numerical heat transfer and fluid flow. This review describes the origins and evolution of the heatlines and masslines as visualization and analysis tools, from their first steps to the present.
    publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    titleBejan’s Heatlines and Masslines for Convection Visualization and Analysis
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume59
    journal issue3
    journal titleApplied Mechanics Reviews
    identifier doi10.1115/1.2177684
    journal fristpage126
    journal lastpage145
    identifier eissn0003-6900
    keywordsFlow (Dynamics)
    keywordsHeat
    keywordsVisualization
    keywordsHeatlines AND Equations
    treeApplied Mechanics Reviews:;2006:;volume( 059 ):;issue: 003
    contenttypeFulltext
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    DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
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