Near-field heat transfer across a gap between plane-parallel tungsten layers in vacuo was studied experimentally with the temperature of the cold sample near 5 K and the temperature of the hot sample in the range 10-40 K as a function of the gap size d. At gaps smaller than one-third of the peak wavelength λ(m) given by Wien's displacement law, the near-field effect was observed. In comparison with blackbody radiation, hundred times higher values of heat flux were achieved at d≈1 μm. Heat flux normalized to the radiative power transferred between black surfaces showed scaling (λ(m)/d)(n), where n≈2.6. This Letter describes the results of experiment and a comparison with present theory over 4 orders of magnitude of heat flux.
We present an experimental study of turbulent Rayleigh-Bénard convection (RBC) in a cylindrical cell of height 0.3 m, diameter 0.3 m. It is designed to minimize the influence of its structure on the convective flow of cryogenic (4)He gas of Prandtl number Pr≈1, with the aim of resolving existing contradictions in Nusselt (Nu) versus Rayleigh number (Ra) scaling. For 7.2×10(6)≤Ra≤10(11) our data agree with suitably corrected data from similar cryogenic experiments and are consistent with Nu∝Ra(2/7). On approaching Ra≈10(11) our data display a crossover to Nu∝Ra(1/3) that approximately holds up to Ra=4.6×10(13); there is no sign of a transition to the ultimate Kraichnan regime. Differences in Nu(Ra) scaling observed in similar RBC experiments for Ra≥10(11) cannot be explained due to the difference in Pr, but seem to depend also on experimental details.
The heat transfer efficiency in turbulent Rayleigh-Bénard convection is investigated experimentally, in a cylindrical cell of height 0.3 m, diameter 0.3 m. We show that for Rayleigh numbers 10(12) < or approximately equal to Ra < or approximately equal to 10(15) the Nusselt number closely follows Nu is proportional to Ra(1/3 if the mean temperature of the working fluid-cryogenic helium gas-is measured by small sensors directly inside the cell at about half of its height. In contrast, if the mean temperature is determined in a conventional way, as an arithmetic mean of the bottom and top plate temperatures, the Nu(Ra) is proportional to Ra(γ) displays spurious crossover to higher γ that might be misinterpreted as a transition to the ultimate Kraichnan regime.
We present experimental results on the heat transfer efficiency of cryogenic turbulent Rayleigh-Bénard convection (RBC) in a cylindrical cell 0.3 m in both diameter and height which has improvements with respect to various corrections connected with finite thermal conductivity of sidewalls and plates. The heat transfer efficiency described by the Nusselt number Here H is the total convective heat flux density, g stands for the acceleration due to gravity, and ΔT is the temperature difference between the parallel top and the bottom plates separated by the vertical distance L. The properties of the working fluid are characterized by the thermal conductivity, λ, and by the combination α νκ ( ) , where α is the isobaric thermal expansion, ν is the kinematic viscosity, and κ denotes the thermal diffusivity. New J. Phys. 16 (2014) 053042 P Urban et al New J. Phys. 16 (2014) 053042 P Urban et al New J. Phys. 16 (2014) 053042 P Urban et al 4 New J. Phys. 16 (2014) 053042 P Urban et al 5 3 Note that our Brno cryogenic data recently published in two Letters [43, 44] are erroneously treated by the authors as aspect ratio Γ = 1 2 data, while they have all been obtained for the Γ = 1 cell. New J. Phys. 16 (2014) 053042 P Urban et al 6 Figure 1. Schematic drawing of the helium cryostat [55] containing the cylindrical aspect ratio Γ = 1 RBC cell. New J. Phys. 16 (2014) 053042 P Urban et al 7 W K 1 25 38 50 New J. Phys. 16 (2014) 053042 P Urban et al 9 Pr Pr Ra c c c (white filled red circles). The black line illustrates the slope ∝ Pr Ra 0.5 . New J. Phys. 16 (2014) 053042 P Urban et al New J. Phys. 16 (2014) 053042 P Urban et al 13 New J. Phys. 16 (2014) 053042 P Urban et alWe thank many colleagues for help and stimulating discussions, especially S Babuin, X He, M Jackson, R du Puits, P-E Roche, J Salort, and D Schmoranzer. This work was supported by the GAČR 203/12/P897, and the work of MLM and LS by GAČR P203/11/0442. Appendix. Tabulated experimental dataIn tables A1 and A2, values of Ra corr and Nu corr represent the corrected data, with corrections applied as discussed in the text. All remaining values of Rayleigh, Prandtl and Nusselt numbers are not corrected in any way.New J. Phys. 16 (2014) 053042 P Urban et al
For bodies spaced in vacuum at distances shorter than the wavelength of the thermal radiation, radiative heat transfer substantially increases due to the contribution of evanescent electromagnetic waves. Experimental data on heat transfer in near-field regime are scarce. We have designed a cryogenic apparatus for the study of heat transfer over microscopic distances between metallic and non-metallic surfaces. Using a mechanical positioning system, a planeparallel gap between the samples, concentric disks, each 35 mm in diameter, is set and varied from 10(0) to 10(3) μm. The heat transferred from the hot (10 - 100 K) to the cold sample (∼5 K) sinks into a liquid helium bath through a thermal resistor, serving as a heat flux meter. Transferred heat power within ∼2 nW∕cm(2) and ∼30 μW∕cm(2) is derived from the temperature drop along the thermal resistor. For tungsten samples, the distance of the near-field effect onset was inversely proportional to temperature and the heat power increase was observed up to three orders of magnitude greater than the power of far-field radiative heat transfer.
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