Average Circumferential Heat Flux
In a system with a rapidly spinning, axially symmetric body, thermal flux characteristics average out around the circumference of the spinning body. A rotating drive shaft near an engine and a spinning motor in a casing give examples of such systems.
Use the Circumferential Flux Averaging model for such systems. This is a heat transfer model for the special case of rapidly rotating bodies, part of the moving reference frame feature. The model maps out equal-width strips of constant temperature along the axis of the spinning body, using the mesh boundaries for averaging.
The model covers two general cases:
- A solid body spinning rapidly in an interfacing fluid medium. Convection, conduction, and radiation operate within in the fluid. Conduction and radiation operate within the solid. The interface is opaque to radiation.
- A solid or fluid body spinning rapidly in a region without mesh, with no medium between the body and its environment. The body and the external environment interact only by thermal radiation between their boundaries, across the empty meshless region. Within the body, convection (if it is fluid), conduction, and radiation can all operate. Convection and radiation heat transfer operate between the boundaries of the body and the environment.
Only use the Circumferential Heat Flux Averaging model under the following conditions:
- The body in question must be axisymmetric, with little or no circumferential variation in any properties or physical conditions. Minor variations from symmetry may still give acceptable results, but use careful judgement.
- The axisymmetric body must be spinning very fast, and the difference between the angular velocity of the spinning body and any other bodies in the system is either very large or very small.
“Very fast” means the spinning body must complete several rotations within its thermal relaxation time for this model to be applicable.
- If you want to include radiation modeling in the simulation, interface boundaries and wall boundaries between the rotating region and the surroundings must be opaque to radiation. (The model does not allow radiation from a non-rotating body to pass through the boundaries of a rotating body.)
For more information, see Circumferential Heat Flux Averaging Formulation.