1 research outputs found
Thermal non-equilibrium heat transfer in a porous cavity in the presence of bio-chemical heat source
This paper is concerned with thermal non-equilibrium natural convection in a
square cavity filled with a porous medium in the presence of a biomass which
is transported in the cavity. The biomass can consume a secondary moving
substrate. The physics of the presented problem is related to the analysis of
heat and mass transfer in a composting process that controlled by internal
heat generation. The intensity of the bio-heat source generated in the cavity
is equal to the rate of consumption of the substrate by the biomass. It is
assumed that the porous medium is homogeneous and isotropic. A two-field
model that represents the fluid and solid phase temperature fields separately
is used for energy equation. A simplified Monod model is introduced along
with the governing equations to describe the consumption of the substrate by
the biomass. In other word, the transient biochemical heat source which is
dependent on a solute concentration is considered in the energy equations.
Investigation of the biomass activity and bio-chemical heat generation in the
case of thermal non-equilibrium assumption has not been considered in the
literature and they are open research topics. The effects of thermal
non-equilibrium model on heat transfer, flow pattern and biomass transfer are
investigated. The effective parameters which have a direct impact on the
generated bio-chemical heat source are also presented. The influences of the
non-dimensional parameters such as fluid-to-solid conductivity ratio on the
temperature distribution are presented