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Purdue ME 606: View Factors

View Factors (or Shape Factors)

F1→2 is the fraction of energy leaving surface 1 that arrives at surface 2

Assume black surfaces

  • flux leaving 1: Eb1
  • total leaving 1: A1Eb1
  • amount arriving at 2: A1Eb1F1→2
  • absorbed at 2: A1Eb1F1→2
  • amount leaving 2 that arrives at 1: A2Eb2F2→1
  • net heat flow: q_{1 \Leftrightarrow 2}=A_1 E_{b1}F_{1 \rightarrow 2}-A_2 E_{b2}F_{2 \rightarrow 1}
  • for isothermal, T1 = T2:
    • q_{1 \leftrightarrow 2} = 0
    • A1F1→2 = A2F2→1
  • q_{1 \leftrightarrow 2}=A_1 E_{b1} F_{1 \rightarrow 2}=A_2 E_{b2} F_{2 \rightarrow 1}

View Factor Details

Assume:

  1. Emission and reflection are diffuse
  2. Intensities are uniform over each surface (i.e. T = constant
  3. Arriving energies are uniform over surfaces
  4. Non participating medium between surfaces
  5. Black surfaces (later relaxed)

I(\theta,\phi)=\frac{d^2q}{dAcos(\theta)d\omega}

d^2q_{dA_1 \rightarrow dA_2} = I_1 cos(\theta_1)dA_1d\omega_{1-2}

where

  • d\omega_{1-2}=\frac{dA_2cos(\theta_2)}{r^2}
  • Eb1 = πI

d^2q_{dA_1 \rightarrow dA_2} = E_{b1} \underbrace{\frac{cos(\theta_1) cos(\theta_2) dA_2}{\pi r^2}}_{dF_{dA_1-dA_2}} dA_1

similarly

d^2q_{dA_2 \rightarrow dA_1} = E_{b2} \underbrace{\frac{cos(\theta_1) cos(\theta_2) dA_1}{\pi r^2}}_{dF_{dA_2-dA_1}} dA_2

dF_{dA_2-dA_1} dA_2 = dF_{dA_1-dA_2} dA_1

  • From dA1 to A2
dq_{dA_1 \rightarrow A_2} = \int_{A_2} d^2q_{dA_1 \rightarrow dA_2} = (E_{b1}-E_{b2}) \underbrace{ \int_{A_2} (\frac{cos(\theta_1)cos(\theta_2)dA_1}{\pi r^2})dA_2 }_{A_2dF_{A_2-A_1}=dA_1F_{dA_1-A_2}}
  • For finite areas A1 & A2
q_{1 \rightarrow 2} = \int dq_{dA_1 \rightarrow A_2} = (E_{b1}-E_{b2}) \underbrace{ \int_{A_1} \int_{A_2} \frac{cos(\theta_1)cos(\theta_2)}{\pi r^2}dA_2dA_1}_{A_2F_{2-1}=A_1F_{1-2}}

Properties of View Factors

consider an arbitrary number of surfaces (1, 2, …, N)

  • F1→(1 + 2 + ... + N) = F11 + F12 + ... + F1N
  • F11 = 0 if 1 is convex or flat

Enclosures

Summation equation: \sum_{k=1}^NF_{1k}=1

The view factors can be arranged in an N x N matrix

  • Observations
    • N2 shape factors
    • N summation equations
    • \frac{N(N-1)}{2} view factors must be found from first principles

Example:

Given a 3 surface enclosure where one surface 3 is a hemispherical cap, surface 1 is a part of the base and surface 2 is the remainder of the base.

Find all the view factors.

From inspection:

  • F12 = F21 = 0
  • F11 = F22 = 0
  • F13 = F23 = 1

Use reciprocity:

  • A_1F_{13}=A_3F_{31} \Rightarrow F_{31}=\frac{A_1}{A_3}
  • A_2F_{23}=A_3F_{32} \Rightarrow F_{32}=\frac{A_2}{A_3}

Use summation equation:

  • F_{31} + F_{32} + F_{33} = 1 \Rightarrow F_{33}=1-\frac{A_1+A_2}{A_3}= 1-\frac{\pi r^2}{2 \pi r^2} = \frac{1}{2}

Methods of Evaluating View Factors

Area Integration

Given 2 surfaces i and j, the vector from dAi going to dAj is given as

\bar{s}_{ij}=-\bar{s}_{ji}=(x_j-x_i)\hat{i} +(y_j-y_i)\hat{j} +(z_j-z_i)\hat{k}

The magnitude (length) of the vector is

|\bar{s}_{ij}|^2= |\bar{s}_{ji}|^2 =r^2= (x_i-x_j)^2 + (y_i-y_j)^2+ (z_i-z_j)^2

cosi) and cosj) can then be evaluated as

cos(\theta_i)= \frac{\hat{n}_i \cdot \bar{s}_{ij}}{r}

cos(\theta_j)= \frac{\hat{n}_j \cdot \bar{s}_{ji}}{r}

where \hat{n}_i and \hat{n}_j are the unit normals from surfaces i and j, respectivley.

The view factors are then calculated as

dF_{dA_i-dA_j}=\frac{cos(\theta_i)cos{\theta_j}}{\pi r^2} dA_j

F_{dA_i-A_j}=\int_{A_j} \frac{cos(\theta_i)cos{\theta_j}}{\pi r^2} dA_j

dF_{A_i-dA_j}=\frac{1}{A_j} \int_{A_j} \frac{cos(\theta_i)cos{\theta_j}}{\pi r^2} dA_jdA_i

F_{A_i-A_j}=\frac{1}{A_i} \int_{A_i} \int_{A_j} \frac{cos(\theta_i)cos{\theta_j}}{\pi r^2} dA_jdA_i

Contour Integration

Stokes’ theorem may be applied to convert the previous area integrals to an equivalent contour integral.

The view factor from a differential area dA1 to an area A2 can be computed

F_{d1-2}=\frac{1}{2\pi} \oint \frac{(\bar{s}_{12} \times \hat{n}_1) \cdot d\bar{s}_2}{r^2}

The view factor from two finite areas is

A_1 F_{1-2}= \frac{1}{2\pi}\oint_1\oint_2 ln(r)~d\bar{s}_2 \cdot d\bar{s}_1

where d\bar{s}=dx\hat{i}+dy\hat{j}+dz\hat{k}

Crossed-String Method

Valid for infinitely long parallel surfaces. From Incropera and Dewitt, Ed. 5, Problem 13.6.

F_{12}=\frac{1}{2 w_1}[(ac+bd)-(ad+bc)]

Last modified on 15 Oct, 2008