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This page describes some parameters used to characterize the properties of the thermal boundary layer formed by a heated (or cooled) fluid moving along a heated (or cooled) wall. In many ways, the thermal boundary layer description parallels the velocity (momentum) boundary layer description first conceptualized by
Ludwig Prandtl Ludwig Prandtl (4 February 1875 – 15 August 1953) was a German Fluid mechanics, fluid dynamicist, physicist and aerospace scientist. He was a pioneer in the development of rigorous systematic mathematical analyses which he used for underlyin ...
. Consider a fluid of uniform temperature T_o and velocity u_o impinging onto a stationary plate uniformly heated to a temperature T_s. Assume the flow and the plate are semi-infinite in the positive/negative direction perpendicular to the x-y plane. As the fluid flows along the wall, the fluid at the wall surface satisfies a no-slip boundary condition and has zero velocity, but as you move away from the wall, the velocity of the flow asymptotically approaches the free stream velocity u_0. The temperature at the solid wall is T_s and gradually changes to T_o as one moves toward the free stream of the fluid. It is impossible to define a sharp point at which the thermal boundary layer fluid or the velocity boundary layer fluid becomes the free stream, yet these layers have a well-defined characteristic thickness given by \delta_T and \delta_v. The parameters below provide a useful definition of this characteristic, measurable thickness for the thermal boundary layer. Also included in this boundary layer description are some parameters useful in describing the shape of the thermal boundary layer.


99% thermal boundary layer thickness

The thermal boundary layer thickness, \delta_T, is the distance across a boundary layer from the wall to a point where the flow temperature has essentially reached the 'free stream' temperature, T_0. This distance is defined normal to the wall in the y-direction. The thermal boundary layer thickness is customarily defined as the point in the boundary layer, y_, where the temperature T(x,y) reaches 99% of the free stream value T_0: :\delta_T = y_ such that T(x,y_) = 0.99 T_0 at a position x along the wall. In a real fluid, this quantity can be estimated by measuring the temperature profile at a position x along the wall. The temperature profile is the temperature as a function of y at a fixed x position. For
laminar flow Laminar flow () is the property of fluid particles in fluid dynamics to follow smooth paths in layers, with each layer moving smoothly past the adjacent layers with little or no mixing. At low velocities, the fluid tends to flow without lateral m ...
over a flat plate at zero incidence, the thermal boundary layer thickness is given by: : \delta_T = \delta_v \mathrm^ : \delta_T = 5.0 \sqrt \mathrm^ where :\mathrm is the
Prandtl Number The Prandtl number (Pr) or Prandtl group is a dimensionless number, named after the German physicist Ludwig Prandtl, defined as the ratio of momentum diffusivity to thermal diffusivity. The Prandtl number is given as:where: * \nu : momentum d ...
:\delta_v is the thickness of the velocity boundary layer thickness :u_0 is the freestream velocity :x is the distance downstream from the start of the boundary layer :\nu is the
kinematic viscosity Viscosity is a measure of a fluid's rate-dependent drag (physics), resistance to a change in shape or to movement of its neighboring portions relative to one another. For liquids, it corresponds to the informal concept of ''thickness''; for e ...
For
turbulent flow In fluid dynamics, turbulence or turbulent flow is fluid motion characterized by Chaos theory, chaotic changes in pressure and flow velocity. It is in contrast to laminar flow, which occurs when a fluid flows in parallel layers with no disrupt ...
over a flat plate, the thickness of the thermal boundary layer that is formed is not determined by thermal diffusion, but instead, it is random fluctuations in the outer region of the boundary layer of the fluid that is the driving force determining thermal boundary layer thickness. Thus the thermal boundary layer thickness for turbulent flow does not depend on the
Prandtl number The Prandtl number (Pr) or Prandtl group is a dimensionless number, named after the German physicist Ludwig Prandtl, defined as the ratio of momentum diffusivity to thermal diffusivity. The Prandtl number is given as:where: * \nu : momentum d ...
but instead on the
Reynolds number In fluid dynamics, the Reynolds number () is a dimensionless quantity that helps predict fluid flow patterns in different situations by measuring the ratio between Inertia, inertial and viscous forces. At low Reynolds numbers, flows tend to ...
. Hence, the turbulent thermal boundary layer thickness is given approximately by the turbulent velocity
boundary layer thickness This page describes some of the parameters used to characterize the thickness and shape of boundary layers formed by fluid flowing along a solid surface. The defining characteristic of boundary layer flow is that at the solid walls, the fluid's ve ...
expression given by: : \delta_T \approx \delta \approx 0.37x/ ^ where := u_0 x/\nu is the
Reynolds number In fluid dynamics, the Reynolds number () is a dimensionless quantity that helps predict fluid flow patterns in different situations by measuring the ratio between Inertia, inertial and viscous forces. At low Reynolds numbers, flows tend to ...
This turbulent boundary layer thickness formula assumes 1) the flow is turbulent right from the start of the boundary layer and 2) the turbulent boundary layer behaves in a geometrically similar manner (i.e. the velocity profiles are geometrically similar along the flow in the x-direction, differing only by stretching factors in y and u(x,y)). Neither one of these assumptions is true for the general turbulent boundary layer case so care must be exercised in applying this formula.


Thermal displacement thickness

The thermal displacement thickness, \beta^* may be thought of in terms of the difference between a real fluid and a hypothetical fluid with thermal diffusion turned off but with velocity u_0 and temperature T_0. With no thermal diffusion, the temperature drop is abrupt. The thermal displacement thickness is the distance by which the hypothetical fluid surface would have to be moved in the y-direction to give the same integrated temperature as occurs between the wall and the reference plane at \delta_T in the real fluid. It is a direct analog to the velocity displacement thickness which is often described in terms of an equivalent shift of a hypothetical inviscid fluid (see Schlichting for velocity displacement thickness). The definition of the thermal displacement thickness for incompressible flow is based on the integral of the reduced temperature: : = \int_0^\infty where the dimensionless temperature is \theta(x,y) = (T(x,y)-T_0)/(T_s-T_0). In a
wind tunnel A wind tunnel is "an apparatus for producing a controlled stream of air for conducting aerodynamic experiments". The experiment is conducted in the test section of the wind tunnel and a complete tunnel configuration includes air ducting to and f ...
, the velocity and temperature profiles are obtained by measuring the velocity and temperature at many discrete y-values at a fixed x-position. The thermal displacement thickness can then be estimated by numerically integrating the scaled temperature profile.


Moment method

A relatively new method for describing the thickness and shape of the thermal boundary layer utilizes the moment method commonly used to describe a random variable's
probability distribution In probability theory and statistics, a probability distribution is a Function (mathematics), function that gives the probabilities of occurrence of possible events for an Experiment (probability theory), experiment. It is a mathematical descri ...
. The moment method was developed from the observation that the plot of the second derivative of the thermal profile for laminar flow over a plate looks very much like a
Gaussian distribution In probability theory and statistics, a normal distribution or Gaussian distribution is a type of continuous probability distribution for a real number, real-valued random variable. The general form of its probability density function is f(x ...
curve. It is straightforward to cast the properly scaled thermal profile into a suitable integral kernel. The thermal profile central moments are defined as: : = \int_0^\infty where the mean location, m_T, is given by: : m_T = \int_0^\infty There are some advantages to also include descriptions of moments of the boundary layer profile derivatives with respect to the height above the wall. Consider the first derivative temperature profile central moments given by: : = \int_0^\infty where the mean location is the thermal displacement thickness \beta^*. Finally the second derivative temperature profile central moments are given by: : = \mu_T \int_0^\infty where the mean location, \mu_T, is given by: : = -\left( \frac\right)_ With the moments and the thermal mean location defined, the boundary layer thickness and shape can be described in terms of the thermal boundary layer width (
variance In probability theory and statistics, variance is the expected value of the squared deviation from the mean of a random variable. The standard deviation (SD) is obtained as the square root of the variance. Variance is a measure of dispersion ...
), thermal
skewness In probability theory and statistics, skewness is a measure of the asymmetry of the probability distribution of a real-valued random variable about its mean. The skewness value can be positive, zero, negative, or undefined. For a unimodal ...
es, and thermal excess (
excess kurtosis In probability theory and statistics, kurtosis (from , ''kyrtos'' or ''kurtos'', meaning "curved, arching") refers to the degree of “tailedness” in the probability distribution of a real-valued random variable. Similar to skewness, kurtosi ...
). For the Pohlhausen solution for laminar flow on a heated flat plate, it is found that thermal boundary layer thickness defined as \delta_T = m_T + 4\sigma_T where \sigma_T=\xi_2^, tracks the 99% thickness very well.Weyburne, 2018, p. 5. For laminar flow, the three different moment cases all give similar values for the thermal boundary layer thickness. For turbulent flow, the thermal boundary layer can be divided into a region near the wall where thermal diffusion is important and an outer region where thermal diffusion effects are mostly absent. Taking a cue from the boundary layer energy balance equation, the second derivative boundary layer moments, track the thickness and shape of that portion of the thermal boundary layer where
thermal diffusivity In thermodynamics, thermal diffusivity is the thermal conductivity divided by density and specific heat capacity at constant pressure. It is a measure of the rate of heat transfer inside a material and has SI, SI units of m2/s. It is an intensive ...
is significant. Hence the moment method makes it possible to track and quantify the region where thermal diffusivity is important using moments whereas the overall thermal boundary layer is tracked using and moments. Calculation of the derivative moments without the need to take derivatives is simplified by using integration by parts to reduce the moments to simply integrals based on the thermal displacement thickness kernel: : = \int_0^\infty This means that the second derivative skewness, for example, can be calculated as: :\gamma_ = \phi_3/\phi_2^ = (2\mu_T^3 - 6\beta^*\mu_T^2 + 6\mu_T k_1)/(-\mu_T^2 + 2\mu_T\beta^*)^


Further reading

* Hermann Schlichting, ''Boundary-Layer Theory'', 7th ed., McGraw Hill, 1979. * Frank M. White, ''Fluid Mechanics'', McGraw-Hill, 5th Edition, 2003. * Amir Faghri, Yuwen Zhang, and John Howell, ''Advanced Heat and Mass Transfer'', Global Digital Press, , 2010.


Notes


References

* Schlichting, Hermann (1979). ''Boundary-Layer Theory'', 7th ed., McGraw Hill, New York, U.S.A. * Weyburne, David (2006). "A mathematical description of the fluid boundary layer," Applied Mathematics and Computation, vol. 175, pp. 1675–1684 * Weyburne, David (2018). "New thickness and shape parameters for describing the thermal boundary layer," arXiv:1704.01120 hysics.flu-dyn {{DEFAULTSORT:Boundary-Layer Thickness Boundary layers Aerodynamics