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This study concerns the heat transfer inside double glazing windows which bend because of extreme climatic conditions (an important temperature difference leads to a pressure drop inside the cavity which results in the bending of the plates). Four reference plane cavities of aspect ratio A = 40 with Rayleigh numbers varying within the laminar flow regime are considered. In each case, the influence on the convective heat transfer of the vertical surfaces bending inward is studied. A two-dimensional numerical simulation based on a finite volume method is performed to investigate natural convection in the air-filled cavities. Important curvature creates two patterns in the enclosure. In the core, heat is transferred more by conduction whereas in the ends multicellular convection occurs. A coefficient of heat transmission K is defined. K strongly increases with curvature. These results will be used to supply correlation allowing to take into account the curvature in the determination of the global coefficient of heat transmission U-factor established from ASHRAE.

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This page is a summary of: Multicellular natural convection in a high aspect ratio cavity: experimental and numerical results, International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, September 2000, Elsevier,
DOI: 10.1016/s0017-9310(99)00362-2.
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