Heat Transfer in Liquid Metals
DOI 10.1615/hedhme.a.000180
2.5.13 Heat Transfer in Liquid Metals
E. V. Firsova and M. E. Lebedev
Liquid metals differ from gases and other liquids in that their thermal diffusivity is considerably greater than their kinematic viscosity, that is, Pr << 1. Molecular heat transfer in laminar or turbulent flow of a liquid metal plays a significant part in both the boundary layer and turbulent core. The Nusselt number is a function of the Peclet number, Nu = f(Pe), where Pe is the Peclet number. Pe is the product of the Reynolds number and the Prandtl number (thus, Pe = Re Pr = u ℓ /κ where u is the fluid velocity, ℓ the characteristic length and κ the thermal diffusivity).
A. Flow in channels
(a) Tubes
The heat transfer between the wall of a duct and a fluid moving relative to the wall can be calculated at any position along the duct using a local heat transfer coefficient defined as
\[\label{eq1} \alpha_{x} = \frac{\dot{q}}{(T_w-T_b)_x} \tag{1}\]
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