Heat Dissipation from Stationary Passenger Car Brake Discs

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TOPOURIS, Stergios ;STAMENKOVIĆ, Dragan ;OLPHE-GALLIARD, Michel ;POPOVIĆ, Vladimir ;TIROVIC, Marko .
Heat Dissipation from Stationary Passenger Car Brake Discs. 
Strojniški vestnik - Journal of Mechanical Engineering, [S.l.], v. 66, n.1, p. 15-28, january 2020. 
ISSN 0039-2480.
Available at: <https://www.sv-jme.eu/article/heat-dissipation-from-stationary-passenger-car-brake-discs/>. Date accessed: 28 mar. 2024. 
doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.5545/sv-jme.2019.6002.
Topouris, S., Stamenković, D., Olphe-Galliard, M., Popović, V., & Tirovic, M.
(2020).
Heat Dissipation from Stationary Passenger Car Brake Discs.
Strojniški vestnik - Journal of Mechanical Engineering, 66(1), 15-28.
doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.5545/sv-jme.2019.6002
@article{sv-jmesv-jme.2019.6002,
	author = {Stergios  Topouris and Dragan  Stamenković and Michel  Olphe-Galliard and Vladimir  Popović and Marko  Tirovic},
	title = {Heat Dissipation from Stationary Passenger Car Brake Discs},
	journal = {Strojniški vestnik - Journal of Mechanical Engineering},
	volume = {66},
	number = {1},
	year = {2020},
	keywords = {brake disc; heat dissipation; convective cooling; computational fluid dynamics; natural convection},
	abstract = {This paper presents an experimental investigation of the heat dissipation from stationary brake discs concentrated on four disc designs: a ventilated disc with radial vanes, two types of ventilated discs with curved vanes (a non-drilled and cross-drilled disc), and a solid disc. The experiments were conducted on a purpose-built thermal spin rig and provided repeatable and accurate temperature measurement and reliable prediction of the total, convective and radiative heat dissipation coefficients. The values obtained compare favourably with computational fluid dynamics results for the ventilated disc with radial vanes and solid disc, though the differences were somewhat pronounced for the ventilated disc. The speeds of the hot air rising above the disc are under 1 m/s, hence too low to experimentally validate. However, the use of a smoke generator and suitable probe was beneficial in qualitatively validating the flow patterns for all four disc designs. Convective heat transfer coefficients increase with temperature, but the values are very low, typically between 3 W/(m2K) and 5 W/(m2K) for the disc designs and temperature range analysed. As expected, from the four designs studied, the disc with radial vanes has the highest convective heat dissipation coefficient and the solid disc the lowest, being about 30 % inferior. Convective heat dissipation coefficient for the discs with curved vanes was about 20 % lower than for the disc with radial vanes, with the cross-drilled design showing marginal improvement at higher temperatures.},
	issn = {0039-2480},	pages = {15-28},	doi = {10.5545/sv-jme.2019.6002},
	url = {https://www.sv-jme.eu/article/heat-dissipation-from-stationary-passenger-car-brake-discs/}
}
Topouris, S.,Stamenković, D.,Olphe-Galliard, M.,Popović, V.,Tirovic, M.
2020 January 66. Heat Dissipation from Stationary Passenger Car Brake Discs. Strojniški vestnik - Journal of Mechanical Engineering. [Online] 66:1
%A Topouris, Stergios 
%A Stamenković, Dragan 
%A Olphe-Galliard, Michel 
%A Popović, Vladimir 
%A Tirovic, Marko 
%D 2020
%T Heat Dissipation from Stationary Passenger Car Brake Discs
%B 2020
%9 brake disc; heat dissipation; convective cooling; computational fluid dynamics; natural convection
%! Heat Dissipation from Stationary Passenger Car Brake Discs
%K brake disc; heat dissipation; convective cooling; computational fluid dynamics; natural convection
%X This paper presents an experimental investigation of the heat dissipation from stationary brake discs concentrated on four disc designs: a ventilated disc with radial vanes, two types of ventilated discs with curved vanes (a non-drilled and cross-drilled disc), and a solid disc. The experiments were conducted on a purpose-built thermal spin rig and provided repeatable and accurate temperature measurement and reliable prediction of the total, convective and radiative heat dissipation coefficients. The values obtained compare favourably with computational fluid dynamics results for the ventilated disc with radial vanes and solid disc, though the differences were somewhat pronounced for the ventilated disc. The speeds of the hot air rising above the disc are under 1 m/s, hence too low to experimentally validate. However, the use of a smoke generator and suitable probe was beneficial in qualitatively validating the flow patterns for all four disc designs. Convective heat transfer coefficients increase with temperature, but the values are very low, typically between 3 W/(m2K) and 5 W/(m2K) for the disc designs and temperature range analysed. As expected, from the four designs studied, the disc with radial vanes has the highest convective heat dissipation coefficient and the solid disc the lowest, being about 30 % inferior. Convective heat dissipation coefficient for the discs with curved vanes was about 20 % lower than for the disc with radial vanes, with the cross-drilled design showing marginal improvement at higher temperatures.
%U https://www.sv-jme.eu/article/heat-dissipation-from-stationary-passenger-car-brake-discs/
%0 Journal Article
%R 10.5545/sv-jme.2019.6002
%& 15
%P 14
%J Strojniški vestnik - Journal of Mechanical Engineering
%V 66
%N 1
%@ 0039-2480
%8 2020-01-14
%7 2020-01-14
Topouris, Stergios, Dragan  Stamenković, Michel  Olphe-Galliard, Vladimir  Popović, & Marko  Tirovic.
"Heat Dissipation from Stationary Passenger Car Brake Discs." Strojniški vestnik - Journal of Mechanical Engineering [Online], 66.1 (2020): 15-28. Web.  28 Mar. 2024
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Topouris, Stergios 
AU  - Stamenković, Dragan 
AU  - Olphe-Galliard, Michel 
AU  - Popović, Vladimir 
AU  - Tirovic, Marko 
PY  - 2020
TI  - Heat Dissipation from Stationary Passenger Car Brake Discs
JF  - Strojniški vestnik - Journal of Mechanical Engineering
DO  - 10.5545/sv-jme.2019.6002
KW  - brake disc; heat dissipation; convective cooling; computational fluid dynamics; natural convection
N2  - This paper presents an experimental investigation of the heat dissipation from stationary brake discs concentrated on four disc designs: a ventilated disc with radial vanes, two types of ventilated discs with curved vanes (a non-drilled and cross-drilled disc), and a solid disc. The experiments were conducted on a purpose-built thermal spin rig and provided repeatable and accurate temperature measurement and reliable prediction of the total, convective and radiative heat dissipation coefficients. The values obtained compare favourably with computational fluid dynamics results for the ventilated disc with radial vanes and solid disc, though the differences were somewhat pronounced for the ventilated disc. The speeds of the hot air rising above the disc are under 1 m/s, hence too low to experimentally validate. However, the use of a smoke generator and suitable probe was beneficial in qualitatively validating the flow patterns for all four disc designs. Convective heat transfer coefficients increase with temperature, but the values are very low, typically between 3 W/(m2K) and 5 W/(m2K) for the disc designs and temperature range analysed. As expected, from the four designs studied, the disc with radial vanes has the highest convective heat dissipation coefficient and the solid disc the lowest, being about 30 % inferior. Convective heat dissipation coefficient for the discs with curved vanes was about 20 % lower than for the disc with radial vanes, with the cross-drilled design showing marginal improvement at higher temperatures.
UR  - https://www.sv-jme.eu/article/heat-dissipation-from-stationary-passenger-car-brake-discs/
@article{{sv-jme}{sv-jme.2019.6002},
	author = {Topouris, S., Stamenković, D., Olphe-Galliard, M., Popović, V., Tirovic, M.},
	title = {Heat Dissipation from Stationary Passenger Car Brake Discs},
	journal = {Strojniški vestnik - Journal of Mechanical Engineering},
	volume = {66},
	number = {1},
	year = {2020},
	doi = {10.5545/sv-jme.2019.6002},
	url = {https://www.sv-jme.eu/article/heat-dissipation-from-stationary-passenger-car-brake-discs/}
}
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Topouris, Stergios 
AU  - Stamenković, Dragan 
AU  - Olphe-Galliard, Michel 
AU  - Popović, Vladimir 
AU  - Tirovic, Marko 
PY  - 2020/01/14
TI  - Heat Dissipation from Stationary Passenger Car Brake Discs
JF  - Strojniški vestnik - Journal of Mechanical Engineering; Vol 66, No 1 (2020): Strojniški vestnik - Journal of Mechanical Engineering
DO  - 10.5545/sv-jme.2019.6002
KW  - brake disc, heat dissipation, convective cooling, computational fluid dynamics, natural convection
N2  - This paper presents an experimental investigation of the heat dissipation from stationary brake discs concentrated on four disc designs: a ventilated disc with radial vanes, two types of ventilated discs with curved vanes (a non-drilled and cross-drilled disc), and a solid disc. The experiments were conducted on a purpose-built thermal spin rig and provided repeatable and accurate temperature measurement and reliable prediction of the total, convective and radiative heat dissipation coefficients. The values obtained compare favourably with computational fluid dynamics results for the ventilated disc with radial vanes and solid disc, though the differences were somewhat pronounced for the ventilated disc. The speeds of the hot air rising above the disc are under 1 m/s, hence too low to experimentally validate. However, the use of a smoke generator and suitable probe was beneficial in qualitatively validating the flow patterns for all four disc designs. Convective heat transfer coefficients increase with temperature, but the values are very low, typically between 3 W/(m2K) and 5 W/(m2K) for the disc designs and temperature range analysed. As expected, from the four designs studied, the disc with radial vanes has the highest convective heat dissipation coefficient and the solid disc the lowest, being about 30 % inferior. Convective heat dissipation coefficient for the discs with curved vanes was about 20 % lower than for the disc with radial vanes, with the cross-drilled design showing marginal improvement at higher temperatures.
UR  - https://www.sv-jme.eu/article/heat-dissipation-from-stationary-passenger-car-brake-discs/
Topouris, Stergios, Stamenković, Dragan, Olphe-Galliard, Michel, Popović, Vladimir, AND Tirovic, Marko.
"Heat Dissipation from Stationary Passenger Car Brake Discs" Strojniški vestnik - Journal of Mechanical Engineering [Online], Volume 66 Number 1 (14 January 2020)

Authors

Affiliations

  • Cranfield University, School of Aerospace, Transport and Manufacturing, UK 1
  • University of Belgrade, Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, Serbia 2

Paper's information

Strojniški vestnik - Journal of Mechanical Engineering 66(2020)1, 15-28
© The Authors, CC-BY 4.0 Int. Change in copyright policy from 2022, Jan 1st.

https://doi.org/10.5545/sv-jme.2019.6002

This paper presents an experimental investigation of the heat dissipation from stationary brake discs concentrated on four disc designs: a ventilated disc with radial vanes, two types of ventilated discs with curved vanes (a non-drilled and cross-drilled disc), and a solid disc. The experiments were conducted on a purpose-built thermal spin rig and provided repeatable and accurate temperature measurement and reliable prediction of the total, convective and radiative heat dissipation coefficients. The values obtained compare favourably with computational fluid dynamics results for the ventilated disc with radial vanes and solid disc, though the differences were somewhat pronounced for the ventilated disc. The speeds of the hot air rising above the disc are under 1 m/s, hence too low to experimentally validate. However, the use of a smoke generator and suitable probe was beneficial in qualitatively validating the flow patterns for all four disc designs. Convective heat transfer coefficients increase with temperature, but the values are very low, typically between 3 W/(m2K) and 5 W/(m2K) for the disc designs and temperature range analysed. As expected, from the four designs studied, the disc with radial vanes has the highest convective heat dissipation coefficient and the solid disc the lowest, being about 30 % inferior. Convective heat dissipation coefficient for the discs with curved vanes was about 20 % lower than for the disc with radial vanes, with the cross-drilled design showing marginal improvement at higher temperatures.

brake disc; heat dissipation; convective cooling; computational fluid dynamics; natural convection