Journal of materials research and technology | 2021

Thermal expansion optimization in solar aircraft using tangent hyperbolic hybrid nanofluid: a solar thermal application

 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Abstract Solar energy is the leading thermal source from the sun, with huge use of technology such as photovoltaic cells, solar power plates, photovoltaic lighting, and solar pumping water. The current effort deals with solar energy analysis and a technique to enhance solar aircraft effectiveness by using solar and nanotechnological energy. The work is based on the investigation of thermal transfer by utilizing hybrid nanofluid past an inside solar wings parabolic trough solar collector (PTSC) to rich the studies of the solar aircraft wings. The thermal source is titled solar radiative flow. For various properties such as porous media, Cattaneo Christov heat flux, viscous dissipation, play heating and thermal energy flow, the heat transfer efficiency of the wings is verified. In the case of the tangent hyperbolic fluid, the entropy generation analysis was applied. The modeled energy and momentum equations were managed using the well-established numerical plan known as the Keller box process. This paper is made up of double-different kinds of nano solid particles, Cu (copper) and ZrO2 (zirconium dioxide) in EG (ethylene glycol) as standard fluid. Various control parameters are discussed and shown in figures and tables for velocity, shear stress, temperature outlines, frictional factor, and Nusselt number. The efficiency in the aircraft wings in the case of thermal radiation amplification and variable thermal conduction parameters is seen to be improved in terms of thermal transfer. In comparison to the traditional nanofluid, hybrid nanofluid is the ideal source of heat transfer. The thermal efficiency of ZrO2–Cu/EG compared to Cu-EG decreases to a low of 2.6% and peaks to 3.6%.

Volume 14
Pages 985-1006
DOI 10.1016/J.JMRT.2021.06.031
Language English
Journal Journal of materials research and technology

Full Text