A. Gopinath et al., THERMOACOUSTIC STREAMING IN A RESONANT CHANNEL - THE TIME-AVERAGED TEMPERATURE DISTRIBUTION, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 103(3), 1998, pp. 1388-1405
The problem of thermoacoustic streaming in a plane parallel resonant c
hannel, representative of the stack in a thermoacoustic engine, has be
en developed in a general dimensionless form. The utility of such a fo
rmulation and its wide ranging applicability to different solid-fluid
combinations is demonstrated by which a consistent account of all the
energy-exchange mechanisms can be made. Certain (wide-gap, thick-wall)
simplifications are initially made to arrive at more manageable forms
of the time-averaged temperature distributions of interest in both th
e fluid gap, and the channel walls. These simplifications clarify the
origin of the thermoacoustic effect and provide a description of the r
esponsible physical mechanisms based on which the validity of the ''bu
cket-brigade'' model is examined. The unexpected role of a little-know
n second-order thermal expansion coefficient is pointed out. It is sho
wn that the conjugate wall-fluid coupling is crucial in yielding the l
arge time-averaged axial temperature gradients that can be induced in
the channel. In particular, the heat transfer rates at the ends of the
channel are found to play an important role in determining the magnit
ude of these time-averaged gradients. The more general and practically
useful case of arbitrary channel gap widths is also treated and it is
found that for ideal gas working fluids there is an optimum channel g
ap width for which the axial thermal stratification in the channel is
maximized. A comparison of the predictions from this study with availa
ble experimental data shows very good agreement. (C) 1998 Acoustical S
ociety of America. [S0001-4966(98)02203-6].