Subcooled Flow Boiling in High Power Density Internal Combustion Engines II: Numerical Modeling
Journal article, 2022

Results from a thermal survey measurement campaign on a four-cylinder Volvo engine was presented in Part I of this article. The focus was predominantly on heat transfer in the engine coolant jacket. This part presents numerical modeling focused specifically on the coolant flow and associated heat transfer in the coolant jacket using computational fluid dynamics (CFD), as a part of a high-resolution complete engine 3D conjugate heat transfer (CHT) model. With local nucleate boiling being an indispensable phenomenon in high power density engines, a dedicated boiling model is essential and is to be used in conjunction with CFD while analyzing heat transfer in the coolant jacket. This article validates a new boiling model with data obtained from the extensive thermal survey measurements, presented in Part I. The new model includes a parameter, based on vapor bubble interactions, that serves as an indication of the transition from beneficial nucleate boiling to high-risk transition and film boiling regimes. This parameter might be used to assess the robustness of new engine designs. The advantages and limitations of the new boiling model are presented and are discussed in detail.

Conjugate heat transfer

Precision cooling

Boiling regimes

Vapor bubble interaction

Subcooled flow boiling

Computational fluid dynamics

Engine thermal management

Author

Sudharsan Vasudevan

Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Fluid Dynamics

Mirko Bovo

Volvo

Powertrain Engineering Sweden AB

SAE International Journal of Engines

1946-3936 (ISSN) 19463944 (eISSN)

Vol. 16 1

Subject Categories

Aerospace Engineering

Energy Engineering

Other Physics Topics

DOI

10.4271/03-16-01-0003

More information

Latest update

6/9/2022 1