Although convective heat transfer can be derived analytically through
dimensional analysis, exact analysis of the
boundary layer, approximate integral analysis of the boundary layer and analogies between energy and
momentum transfer, these analytic approaches may not offer practical solutions to all problems when there are no mathematical models applicable. Therefore, many correlations were developed by various authors to estimate the convective heat transfer coefficient in various cases including natural convection,
forced convection for internal flow and forced convection for external flow. These
empirical correlations are presented for their particular geometry and flow conditions. As the fluid properties are temperature dependent, they are evaluated at the
film temperature T_f, which is the average of the surface T_s and the surrounding bulk temperature, {{T}_{\infty }}. :{{T}_{f}}=\frac{{{T}_{s}}+{{T}_{\infty }}}{2}
External flow, vertical plane Recommendations by Churchill and Chu provide the following correlation for natural convection adjacent to a vertical plane, both for laminar and turbulent flow.
k is the
thermal conductivity of the fluid,
L is the
characteristic length with respect to the direction of gravity, Ra
L is the
Rayleigh number with respect to this length and Pr is the
Prandtl number (the Rayleigh number can be written as the product of the Grashof number and the Prandtl number). :h \ = \frac{k}{L}\left({0.825 + \frac{0.387 \mathrm{Ra}_L^{1/6}}{\left(1 + (0.492/\mathrm{Pr})^{9/16} \right)^{8/27} }}\right)^2 \, \quad \mathrm{Ra}_L For laminar flows, the following correlation is slightly more accurate. It is observed that a transition from a laminar to a turbulent boundary occurs when Ra
L exceeds around 109. :h \ = \frac{k}{L} \left(0.68 + \frac{0.67 \mathrm{Ra}_L^{1/4}}{\left(1 + (0.492/\mathrm{Pr})^{9/16}\right)^{4/9}}\right) \, \quad \mathrm10^{-1}
External flow, vertical cylinders For cylinders with their axes vertical, the expressions for plane surfaces can be used provided the curvature effect is not too significant. This represents the limit where boundary layer thickness is small relative to cylinder diameter D. For fluids with Pr ≤ 0.72, the correlations for vertical plane walls can be used when :\frac{D}{L}\ge \frac{35}{\mathrm{Gr}_{L}^{\frac{1}{4}}} where \mathrm{Gr}_L is the
Grashof number. And in fluids of Pr ≤ 6 when :\frac{D}{L}\ge \frac{25.1}{\mathrm{Gr}_{L}^{\frac{1}{4}}} Under these circumstances, the error is limited to up to 5.5%.
External flow, horizontal plates W. H. McAdams suggested the following correlations for horizontal plates. The induced
buoyancy will be different depending upon whether the hot surface is facing up or down. For a hot surface facing up, or a cold surface facing down, for
laminar flow: :h \ = \frac{k 0.54 \mathrm{Ra}_L^{1/4}} {L} \, \quad 10^5 and for turbulent flow: :h \ = \frac{k 0.14 \mathrm{Ra}_L^{1/3}} {L} \, \quad 2\times 10^7 For a hot surface facing down, or a cold surface facing up, for laminar flow: :h \ = \frac{k 0.27 \mathrm{Ra}_L^{1/4}} {L} \, \quad 3\times 10^5 The characteristic length is the ratio of the plate surface area to perimeter. If the surface is inclined at an angle
θ with the vertical then the equations for a vertical plate by Churchill and Chu may be used for
θ up to 60°; if the boundary layer flow is laminar, the gravitational constant
g is replaced with
g cos
θ when calculating the Ra term.
External flow, horizontal cylinder For cylinders of sufficient length and negligible end effects, Churchill and Chu has the following correlation for 10^{-5}. :h \ = \frac{k} {D}\left({0.6 + \frac{0.387 \mathrm{Ra}_D^{1/6}}{\left(1 + (0.559/\mathrm{Pr})^{9/16} \, \right)^{8/27} \,}}\right)^2
External flow, spheres For spheres, T. Yuge has the following correlation for Pr≃1 and 1 \le \mathrm{Ra}_D \le 10^5. :{\mathrm{Nu}}_D \ = 2 + 0.43 \mathrm{Ra}_D^{1/4}
Vertical rectangular enclosure For heat flow between two opposing vertical plates of rectangular enclosures, Catton recommends the following two correlations for smaller aspect ratios. The correlations are valid for any value of Prandtl number. For 1 : :h \ = \frac{k}{L}0.18 \left(\frac{\mathrm{Pr}}{0.2 + \mathrm{Pr}} \mathrm{Ra}_L \right)^{0.29} \, \quad \mathrm{Ra}_L \mathrm{Pr}/(0.2 + \mathrm{Pr}) > 10^3 where
H is the internal height of the enclosure and
L is the horizontal distance between the two sides of different temperatures. For 2 : :h \ = \frac{k}{L}0.22 \left(\frac{\mathrm{Pr}}{0.2 + \mathrm{Pr}} \mathrm{Ra}_L \right)^{0.28} \left(\frac{H}{L} \right)^{-1/4} \, \quad \mathrm{Ra}_L For vertical enclosures with larger aspect ratios, the following two correlations can be used.
Internal flow, turbulent flow The Dittus-Bölter correlation (1930) is a common and particularly simple correlation useful for many applications. This correlation is applicable when forced convection is the only mode of heat transfer; i.e., there is no boiling, condensation, significant radiation, etc. The accuracy of this correlation is anticipated to be ±15%. For a fluid flowing in a straight circular pipe with a
Reynolds number between 10,000 and 120,000 (in the
turbulent pipe flow range), when the fluid's
Prandtl number is between 0.7 and 120, for a location far from the pipe entrance (more than 10 pipe diameters; more than 50 diameters according to many authors) or other flow disturbances, and when the pipe surface is hydraulically smooth, the heat transfer coefficient between the bulk of the fluid and the pipe surface can be expressed explicitly as: :{h d \over k}= {0.023} \, \left({j d \over \mu}\right)^{0.8} \, \left({\mu c_p \over k}\right)^n where: :d is the
hydraulic diameter :k is the
thermal conductivity of the bulk fluid :\mu is the fluid
viscosity :j is the
mass flux :c_p is the isobaric
heat capacity of the fluid :n is 0.4 for heating (wall hotter than the bulk fluid) and 0.33 for cooling (wall cooler than the bulk fluid). The fluid properties necessary for the application of this equation are evaluated at the
bulk temperature thus avoiding iteration.
Forced convection, external flow In analyzing the heat transfer associated with the flow past the exterior surface of a solid, the situation is complicated by phenomena such as boundary layer separation. Various authors have correlated charts and graphs for different geometries and flow conditions. For flow parallel to a plane surface, where x is the distance from the edge and L is the height of the boundary layer, a mean Nusselt number can be calculated using the
Colburn analogy. ==Thom correlation==