Experimental study of critical heat flux mechanism on a vertical heated surface under rolling motion

2021 ◽  
Vol 151 ◽  
pp. 107967
Author(s):  
Samah A. Albdour ◽  
Elvira F. Tanjung ◽  
Daeseong Jo
1982 ◽  
Vol 104 (2) ◽  
pp. 300-303 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Monde ◽  
H. Kusuda ◽  
H. Uehara

An experimental study of the critical heat flux has been carried out for natural convective boiling at atmospheric pressure in vertical rectangular channels. Experiments in four kinds of test liquids (water, ethanol, freon 113, and benzene) have been made for the ratio l/s less than 120, in which l is the length of the heated surface and s is the width of the channels. A generalized correlation for the critical heat-flux data in the four test liquids is evolved.


Author(s):  
Emilio Baglietto ◽  
Etienne Demarly ◽  
Ravikishore Kommajosyula

Advancement in the experimental techniques have brought new insights into the microscale boiling phenomena, and provide the base for a new physical interpretation of flow boiling heat transfer. A new modeling framework in Computational Fluid Dynamics has been assembled at MIT, and aims at introducing all necessary mechanisms, and explicitly tracks: (1) the size and dynamics of the bubbles on the surface; (2) the amount of microlayer and dry area under each bubble; (3) the amount of surface area influenced by sliding bubbles; (4) the quenching of the boiling surface following a bubble departure and (5) the statistical bubble interaction on the surface. The preliminary assessment of the new framework is used to further extend the portability of the model through an improved formulation of the force balance models for bubble departure and lift-off. Starting from this improved representation at the wall, the work concentrates on the bubble dynamics and dry spot quantification on the heated surface, which governs the Critical Heat Flux (CHF) limit. A new proposition is brought forward, where Critical Heat Flux is a natural limiting condition for the heat flux partitioning on the boiling surface. The first principle based CHF is qualitatively demonstrated, and has the potential to deliver a radically new simulation technique to support the design of advanced heat transfer systems.


Author(s):  
Ravi Kumar Cheedarala ◽  
Eunju Park ◽  
Kyungil Kong ◽  
Young-Bin Park ◽  
Hyung Wook Park

1999 ◽  
Vol 187 (3) ◽  
pp. 339-362 ◽  
Author(s):  
I.L Pioro ◽  
S.C Cheng ◽  
D.C Groeneveld ◽  
A.Ž Vasić ◽  
S Pinchon ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Suazlan Mt Aznam ◽  
Shoji Mori ◽  
Kunito Okuyama

Heat removal through pool boiling is limited by the phenomena of critical heat flux (CHF). CHF enhancement is vitally important in order to satisfy demand for the cooling technology with high heat flux in In Vessel Retention (IVR). Various surface modifications of the boiling surface, e.g., integrated surface structures and coating of a micro-porous have been proven to effectively enhance the CHF in saturated pool boiling. We have been proposed a novel method of attaching a honeycomb structured porous plate on a considerably large heater surface. Previous results, by the authors in [1] reported that CHF has been enhanced experimentally up to more than approximately twice that of a plain surface (approximately 2.0 to 2.5 MW/m2) with a diameter of 30 mm heated surface. However, it is necessary to demonstrate the method together with infinite heater surface within laboratory scale. It is important that cooling techniques for IVR could be applicable to a large heated surface as well as remove high heat flux. Objective of this study is to investigate the CHF of honeycomb porous plate and metal solid structure in nanofluid boiling or water boiling on a large heated surface. Water-based nanofluid offers good wettability and capillarity. While metal solid structure is installed on honeycomb porous plate to increase the number of vapor jet. Experimental results of honeycomb porous plate and combination of honeycomb porous plate and metal solid structure in water-based nanofluid boiling shows that CHF is increased up to twice [2] and thrice, respectively compared to plain surface in water boiling. To the best of the author’s knowledge, the highest value (3.1 MW/m2) was obtained for a large heated surface having a diameter of 50 mm which is regarded as infinite heated surface. This demonstrates potential for general applicability to have more safety margin in IVR method.


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