TY - JOUR
T1 - Submerged jet's profile-specific heat transfer
T2 - Stagnation zone and beyond
AU - Kashi, Barak
AU - Haustein, Herman D.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025
PY - 2025/8/1
Y1 - 2025/8/1
N2 - A general analytical description for the heat transfer distribution (HTD) under an impinging submerged jet is derived, from the jet velocity profile arriving at the wall. First, the cause-and-effect chain is broken down: i) the streamline-bending projection of the arriving profile's dynamic pressure gives the wall pressure distribution; ii) the pressure gradient drives the radial acceleration; iii) the acceleration unlocks the entire flow field: boundary layer, wall-shear and vorticity distributions; iv) ultimately also the HTD is recovered from similarity; iv) this extends up to deceleration, approaching the known wall-jet solution. This new theory is validated against simulations and experiments over a wide range of conditions: from uniform to fully developed issuing profiles, over a range of flights. Thus, confirming that the arriving profile contains everything needed for the subsequent wall-flow description, and demonstrating that the HTD diversity corresponds to that of the arrival profiles. This permits the prediction of the HTD in a universal way, from stagnation point to wall-jet. Specifically, relating the well-known off-center peak (boundary layer thinning) to an incoming profile shape with strong velocity gradients, as encountered in profiles with a potential core. Two different pathways for the generation of this off-center peak are studied and compared.
AB - A general analytical description for the heat transfer distribution (HTD) under an impinging submerged jet is derived, from the jet velocity profile arriving at the wall. First, the cause-and-effect chain is broken down: i) the streamline-bending projection of the arriving profile's dynamic pressure gives the wall pressure distribution; ii) the pressure gradient drives the radial acceleration; iii) the acceleration unlocks the entire flow field: boundary layer, wall-shear and vorticity distributions; iv) ultimately also the HTD is recovered from similarity; iv) this extends up to deceleration, approaching the known wall-jet solution. This new theory is validated against simulations and experiments over a wide range of conditions: from uniform to fully developed issuing profiles, over a range of flights. Thus, confirming that the arriving profile contains everything needed for the subsequent wall-flow description, and demonstrating that the HTD diversity corresponds to that of the arrival profiles. This permits the prediction of the HTD in a universal way, from stagnation point to wall-jet. Specifically, relating the well-known off-center peak (boundary layer thinning) to an incoming profile shape with strong velocity gradients, as encountered in profiles with a potential core. Two different pathways for the generation of this off-center peak are studied and compared.
KW - Boundary layer thinning
KW - Homann's solution
KW - Off center peak
KW - Stagnation zone
KW - Submerged jet
KW - Wall jet
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105000716641
U2 - 10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2025.126924
DO - 10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2025.126924
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AN - SCOPUS:105000716641
SN - 0017-9310
VL - 245
JO - International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer
JF - International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer
M1 - 126924
ER -