The local heat transfer measurements in the cooling flow passage having both flat surface
and semi-cylindrically grooved surface geometries inside the automobile disc brake were made. A
uniform wall heat flux boundary condition on both surface geometries was created using gold film
Intrex. Liquid crystal was used to measure the surface temperature. The experiments were made at
Reynolds number (based on the hydraulic diameter of the rectangular duct) of Re=23,000, groove
pitch-to-width (P/D) from 3 to 7, and groove depth-to-width (H/D) from 0.15 to 0.2. The results
show that the magnitudes in the average Nusselt number on the grooved surface are maximum
92.8% higher than those on the flat surface without groove. A computer program utilizing the
coupled FEM numerical technique that can predict the temperature distributions on the disc brake to
analyze the thermal deformation has been developed.
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