In this article, analysis of average Nusselt number (Nu avg), which indicates the heat removal from the battery pack cooled by flowing fluid is carried out considering coupled heat transfer condition at the pack and coolant interface. Five categories of coolant, mainly gases, common oils, thermal oils, nanofluids, and liquid metals, are selected. In each coolant category, five fluids (having different Prandtl number Pr) are selected and passed over the Li-ion battery pack. The analysis is made for different conductivity ratio (Cr), heat generation term (Q gen), Reynolds number (Re), and Pr. Pr varying in the range 0.0208-511.5 (25 coolants) and Cr for each category of coolant having its own upper and lower limit are used to analyze the heat removed from the battery pack. Using single feed-forward network and integrating two feed-forward networks having multi-layers with backpropagation is employed for artificial neural network (ANN) modelling. In this modelling, the concept of the main network and space network is devised for multiple back propagation (MBP). The numerical analysis revealed that the temperature distribution in battery and fluid is greatly affected by increasing Cr. The maximum temperature located close to the upper edge of battery is found to get reduced significantly with the increase of Cr, but upto a certain limit above which reduction is marginal. The analysis carried out reveals that Cr and Q gen have no role in improving Nu avg while Pr and Re vary it significantly in each step. Moreover, Nu avg is found to increase with Re continuously irrespective of any Cr and Q gen. While, for oils with an increase in Pr and Re, Nu avg was found to reduce significantly. Nanofluids are found to be more effective in improving heat transfer from the battery pack when cooled by flowing nano-coolants over it. The MBP networks proposed are successfully trained, and hence they can be used for prediction of Nu avg .
The use of Li-ion battery in electric vehicles is becoming extensive in the modern-day world owing to their high energy density and longer life. But there is a concern of proper thermal management to have consistent performance. Therefore, proper cooling mechanism to have a good life and reliability on the battery system is necessary. The main objective of this analysis is to assess the maximum temperature that causes thermal runaway when the battery pack is cooled by several fluids. Five categories of coolants are passed over the heat-generating battery pack to extract the heat and keep the temperature in the limit. Different kinds of gases, conventional oils, thermal oils, nanofluids, and liquid metals are adopted as coolants in each category. This analysis is a novel study which considers different categories of coolant and conjugate heat transfer condition at the battery pack and coolant interface. In each group of coolant, five types of fluids are selected and analyzed to obtain the least maximum temperature of battery. The flow Reynolds number (Re), heat generation (Q gen ), and conductivity ratio (Cr) are other parameters considered for the analysis. The Nusselt number for air and water as coolant with increase in Re is studied separately at the end. The maximum temperature is found to increase with Q gen and decrease for Re and Cr. Thermal oils, nanofluids, and liquid metals are found to provide maximum temperature in the same range of 0.62 to 0.54. At the same time, gases have nearly the same effect at different values of Re and Cr.
Abstract:The higher thermodynamic efficiency inherent in a detonation combustion based engine has already led to considerable interest in the development of wave rotor, pulse detonation, and rotating detonation engine configurations as alternative technologies offering improved performance for the next generation of aerospace propulsion systems, but it is now important to consider their emissions also. To assess both performance and emissions, this paper focuses on the feasibility of using alternative fuels in detonation combustion. Thus, the standard aviation fuels Jet-A, Acetylene, Jatropha Bio-synthetic Paraffinic Kerosene, Camelina Bio-synthetic Paraffinic Kerosene, Algal Biofuel, and Microalgae Biofuel are all asessed under detonation combustion conditions. An analytical model accounting for the Rankine-Hugoniot Equation, Rayleigh Line Equation, and Zel'dovich-von Neumann-Doering model, and taking into account single step chemistry and thermophysical properties for a stoichiometric mixture, is applied to a simple detonation tube test case configuration. The computed pressure rise and detonation velocity are shown to be in good agreement with published literature. Additional computations examine the effects of initial pressure, temperature, and mass flux on the physical properties of the flow. The results indicate that alternative fuels require higher initial mass flux and temperature to detonate. The benefits of alternative fuels appear significant.
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