Hmza Ashur Milad Mohamed


Permanent Lecturer

Qualification: Doctorate

Academic rank: Lecturer

Specialization: انتقال الحرارة بالإشعاع - انتقال الحرارة Heat Transfer

- Faculty of Engineering

Publications
VERTICAL RECTANGULAR FINS ARRAY DESIGN EXPERIMENTAL AND THEORITICAL COMPARISONS
Journal Article
  • Experimental and theoretical comparisons have been performed for natural convection heat transfer over rectangular fins array at different fin parameters. This investigation includes the effect of fin length, fin spacing, fin height, orientation angle, and temperature difference between the heat sink and the surrounding environment. To understand the general flow patterns dominating flows from the heat sink, the three dimensionless elliptic governing equations were solved using finite volume computational fluid dynamics (CFD) code, and the experimental work was carried for the system at different orientations. A new empirical correlation (modified of McAdam's correlation) was derived to correlate the mean Nusselt number as a function of the Rayleigh number. The average heat transfer coefficient has a maximum value at an orientation angle equal to zero degrees, and it decreases with an increasing orientation angle. The heat transfer rate per unit base area increases as fin spacing increase until it reaches a maximum value (6.5 mm), then it decreases with a further increase of fin spacing. The results of these investigations between the experimental and theoretical study were showing good agreements with similar international works.

Hmza Ashur Milad Mohamed, (09-2021), USA: IJSRED, 4 (5), 937-953

OPTIMUM DESIGN OF VERTICAL RECTANGULAR FIN ARRAY
Journal Article

Experimental and numerical investigations have been performed to study the natural convection heat transfer from a vertical rectangular fin arrays at different orientation angles.An experimental setup was constructed and calibrated to test different fin configurations. It basically consists of base plate, an array of parallel longitudinal fins, heating unit and layers of thermal insulation. Fin length (L) and fin thickness (t) were kept fixed at 187 and 6.5 mm respectively, while fin spacing (S) was varied from 3 to 16 mm and fin height (H) was varied from 15 to 45 mm. The orientation angle (β) was changed from 0° to 60°, and temperature difference between fin and surrounding (∆T) from 30 to 95 o C.Base-to-ambient temperature difference was also varied through a calibrated wattmeter ranging from 10 to 180W. To understand the general flow patterns dominating flows from the heat sink, the three-dimensionless elliptic governing equations were solved using finite volume computational fluid dynamics (CFD) code. A comparative study between the experimental and numerical results was performed to verify the numerical code. It was found for the configuration tested that the heat transfer rate per unit base area increases with the increase in the fin spacing and reaches a maximum value then decreases with farther increase in the fin spacing. The maximum heat dissipation occurs at optimal spacing S opt =7 mm. Empirical correlations between Nussult number, Rayleigh number, fin spacing, fin height, orientation angle, temperature difference between the fin and surroundings were derived. Finally the present work general empirical formula is given in the form =. .. .. Where , 15 mm ≤ H ≤ 45 mm, 3mm ≤ S ≤ 16 mm, °0 ≤ β ≤°60, t = 6.5 mm, L = 187 mm.

Hmza Ashur Milad Mohamed, (07-2021), USA: IJSRED, 4 (4), 1110-1133

NATIRT – Model of the Loss of Flow Transient for Tajoura Research Reactor with LEU Fuel
Journal Article

Design parameters are presented for Tajoura reactor core utilizing the new fuel assemblies with low enriched uranium (LEU, using IRT-4M fuel assemblies) in the steady state safety operational parameters and Loss of Flow transient mathematical models (NATIRT - computer program. The calculated results of the model are presented in the cases of forced convection steady state, transient during emergency tank filling and natural convection after emergency tank filling modes at different reactor core thermal power level. The results of NATIRT for all cases of flow were in good agreement with the PARET and PLTEMP computer programs.

Hmza Ashur Milad Mohamed, (01-2021), USA: IJSRED, 4 (5), 1-9

Mie MODEL OF RADIATION HEAT TRANSFERIN ISOTHERMAL SPHERICAL MEDIUM
Journal Article

In certain extremely low probability, severe accident scenarios which have been postulated for liquid metal cooled fast reactors,large bubble cavities containing fuel vapor and fission products transit a layer of coolant and release this material to the cover gas thereby presenting a contribution to an accident-specific source term [5].Mie model in radiation heat transfer has been investigated to analysis and interpret the experiments that conducted during 1980's for oxide UO 2 fueled reactors in Fuel Aerosol Simulant Test (FAST) facility at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL).These analyses are applied to estimate the bubble collapse of Liquid Metal reactors (LMR's) during a hypothetical core disruptive accident (HCDA).InMie scattering model the particle size was 0.07 µm [6]. The scattering coefficient of UO 2 particles (σ = 1.24 m-1), was calculated by using Mie theory,at the same number of stable nuclei's N (2.9 E15 nuclei/m 3) that resulted from theabsorbed coefficientk = 0.082 m-1 [7].P 1 approximation method was used to solve the radiative heat transfer equation (RTE) in spherical coordinates of participating medium confined between the two concentric spheres.The surfaces of the spheres are assumed to be gray, diffusely emitting and diffusely reflecting boundaries, and an isothermal boundary conditions were assumed at these surfaces.Marsak's boundary condition was to computed, the net radiative heat flux q(τ), and the incident radiation G(τ), to analyze and interpret the CVD experiments data that were conducted in the FAST facility at ORNL [8] and Fast Flux Test Facility reactor (FFTF) in Argonne National Laboratory ANL.The conclude that extracted from this study is greater margin of safety when the bubble rising time is greater than the bubble collapse time since the bubble collapses (UO 2 condenses) before it can reach the top of the vessel therefore there is less chance of release of aerosol as in Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) FAST experiments and Argonne National Laboratory (FFTF) reactor.






Hmza Ashur Milad Mohamed, (09-2020), USA: IJSRED, 3 (5), 402-420

Rayleigh Model of Radiation Heat Transfer in Spherical Medium
Journal Article

In certain extremely low probability, severe accident scenarios which have been postulated for liquid metal cooled fast reactors, large bubble cavities containing fuel vapor and fission products transit a layer of coolant and release this material to the cover gas thereby presenting a contribution to an accident-specific source term [5]. Rayleigh model in radiation heat transfer has been investigated to analysis and interpret the experiments that conducted during 1980's for oxide UO 2 fueled reactors in Fuel Aerosol Simulant Test (FAST) facility at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL).These analyses are applied to estimate the bubble collapse of Liquid Metal reactors (LMR's) during a hypothetical core disruptive accident (HCDA). In Rayleigh non-scattering model the particle size was 0.01 µm [6],and according to Mie theory principle, the absorption coefficient for small particle-size distribution was estimated (k = 10 m-1 was used) from reference [7] at complex refractive index of UO 2 at λ = 600 µm and x = 0.0785.A MATLAB code was used to solvethe radiative heat equation (RTE) in spherical coordinates. The mixture is in local thermodynamic equilibrium inside the bubble which has a black body surface boundary.The mixture in the cavity contains three components: the non-condensable gas Xenon, Uranium dioxide vapor, and fog.To simulate fuel bubble's geometry as realistically as possible, according to experimental observation, the energy equation in a spherical coordinate system has been solved with the radiative flux heat transfer equation (RTE) to obtain the effect of fuel bubble's geometry on the transient radiative heat flux and to predict the transient temperature distribution in the participating medium during a hypothetical core disruptive accident (HCDA) for liquid metal fast breeding reactor (LMFBR) for FAST. The transient temperature distribution in fog region was utilized to predict the amount of condensable UO 2 vapor = − ! " ! #. The conclusion that can be drawn from the present study, is that the Fuel Aerosol Simulant Test (FAST) facility at Oak Ridge National Laboratory has a larger margin of safety since the bubble rising time is greater than the bubble collapse time.

Hmza Ashur Milad Mohamed, (09-2020), USA: IJSRED, 3 (5), 421-437

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