Heat Transfer Engineering, Vol.37, No.1, 106-114, 2016
Heat Transfer and Pressure Drop Characteristics of Nanofluid Flows Inside Corrugated Tubes
An experimental investigation is carried out to study the heat transfer and pressure drop characteristics of multiwalled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs)/heat transfer oil nanofluid flows inside horizontal corrugated tubes under uniform wall temperature condition. To provide the applied nanafluids, MWCNTs are dispersed in heat transfer oil with mass concentrations of 0.05, 0.1, and 0.2wt%. The Reynolds number varies between 100 and 4,000. Three tubes with hydraulic diameters of 11.9, 13.2, and 15.5mm are applied as the test section in the experimental setup. Tubes are corrugated four times on the cross section; that is, there are four different helices around the tube. Depths of the corrugations are chosen as 0.9, 1.1, and 1.3mm, and pitch of corrugation is 14mm. The acquired data confirm the increase of heat transfer rate as a result of utilizing nanofluids in comparison with the base fluid flow. However, corrugating the tubes decreases the heat transfer rate at low Reynolds numbers. The highest increase in heat transfer rate is observed for the Reynolds numbers for which the smooth tube is in the transition regime and the corrugated tube reaches the turbulent flow, that is, Reynolds number in the range of 1,000 to 3,000. Rough correlations are proposed to predict the Nusselt number and friction factor.