Fundamental Issues and Recent Advancements in Analysis of Aircraft Brake Natural Convective Cooling

Author:

Dyko M. P.1,Vafai K.2

Affiliation:

1. Aircraft Braking Systems Corporation, Akron, OH 44306

2. Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43210

Abstract

A heightened awareness of the importance of natural convective cooling as a driving factor in design and thermal management of aircraft braking systems has emerged in recent years. As a result, increased attention is being devoted to understanding the buoyancy-driven flow and heat transfer occurring within the complex air passageways formed by the wheel and brake components, including the interaction of the internal and external flow fields. Through application of contemporary computational methods in conjunction with thorough experimentation, robust numerical simulations of these three-dimensional processes have been developed and validated. This has provided insight into the fundamental physical mechanisms underlying the flow and yielded the tools necessary for efficient optimization of the cooling process to improve overall thermal performance. In the present work, a brief overview of aircraft brake thermal considerations and formulation of the convection cooling problem are provided. This is followed by a review of studies of natural convection within closed and open-ended annuli and the closely related investigation of inboard and outboard subdomains of the braking system. Relevant studies of natural convection in open rectangular cavities are also discussed. Both experimental and numerical results obtained to date are addressed, with emphasis given to the characteristics of the flow field and the effects of changes in geometric parameters on flow and heat transfer. Findings of a concurrent numerical and experimental investigation of natural convection within the wheel and brake assembly are presented. These results provide, for the first time, a description of the three-dimensional aircraft braking system cooling flow field.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics,General Materials Science

Reference53 articles.

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3. Bishop, E. H., and Carley, C. T., 1966, “Photographic Studies of Natural Convection Between Concentric Cylinders,” Proceedings of the 1966 Heat Transfer and Fluid Mechanics Institute, pp. 63–78.

4. Bishop E. H. , 1988, “Heat Transfer by Natural Convection of Helium Between Horizontal Isothermal Concentric Cylinders at Cryogenic Temperature,” ASME JOURNAL OF HEAT TRANSFER, Vol. 110, pp. 109–115.

5. Braun, M. J., Daniels, C. C., Dyko, M. P., and Krga, V., 1997, “Temperature Distribution and Flow Characteristics of a Concentric Horizontal Cylinder Configuration,” Proceedings of the 1997 ASME Fluids Engineering Division Summer Meeting, Paper No. FEDSM-3088.

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