Finned heat sinks with phase change materials and metal foams: Pareto optimization to address cost and operation time

Author(s):  
Nicola Bianco ◽  
Stefano Busiello ◽  
Marcello Iasiello ◽  
Gerardo Maria Mauro
Author(s):  
D. Zhou ◽  
C. Y. Zhao

Phase change materials (PCMs) have been widely used for thermal energy storage systems due to their capability of storing and releasing large amounts of energy with a small volume and a moderate temperature variation. Most PCMs suffer the common problem of low thermal conductivity, being around 0.2 and 0.5 for paraffin and inorganic salts, respectively, which prolongs the charging and discharging period. In an attempt to improve the thermal conductivity of phase change materials, the graphite or metallic matrix is often embedded within PCMs to enhance the heat transfer. This paper presents an experimental study on heat transfer characteristics of PCMs embedded with open-celled metal foams. In this study both paraffin wax and calcium chloride hexahydrate are employed as the heat storage media. The transient heat transfer behavior is measured. Compared to the results of pure PCMs samples, the investigation shows that the additions of metal foams can double the overall heat transfer rate during the melting process. The results of calcium chloride hexahydrate are also compared with those of paraffin wax.


2020 ◽  
Vol 45 (29) ◽  
pp. 14922-14939 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hafsa El Mghari ◽  
Jacques Huot ◽  
Liang Tong ◽  
Jinsheng Xiao

Nanomaterials ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 284 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nadezhda S. Bondareva ◽  
Nikita S. Gibanov ◽  
Mikhail A. Sheremet

The cooling of electronic elements is one of the most important problems in the development of architecture in electronic technology. One promising developing cooling method is heat sinks based on the phase change materials (PCMs) enhanced by nano-sized solid particles. In this paper, the influence of the PCM’s physical properties and the concentration of nanoparticles on heat and mass transfer inside a closed radiator with fins, in the presence of a source of constant volumetric heat generation, is analyzed. The conjugate problem of nano-enhanced phase change materials (NePCMs) melting is considered, taking into account natural convection in the melt under the impact of the external convective cooling. A two-dimensional problem is formulated in the non-primitive variables, such as stream function and vorticity. A single-phase nano-liquid model is employed to describe the transport within NePCMs.


Author(s):  
C. Y. Zhao ◽  
D. Zhou ◽  
Z. G. Wu

In this paper the solid/liquid phase change heat transfer in porous materials (metal foams and expanded graphite) at low and high temperatures is experimentally investigated, in an attempt to examine the feasibility of using metal foams to enhance the heat transfer capability of phase change materials for use with both the low and high temperature thermal energy storage systems. In this research, the organic commercial paraffin wax and inorganic hydrate calcium chloride hydrate salts were employed as the low-temperature materials, while the sodium nitrate is used as the high-temperature PCM in the experiment. The heat transfer characteristics of these PCMs embedded with open-cell metal foams were studied experimentally. The composites of paraffin and expanded graphite with different graphite mass ratios, namely, 3%, 6% and 9%, were also made and the heat transfer performances of these composites were tested and compared with metal foams. Overall metal foams can provide better heat transfer performance than expanded graphite due to their continuous inter-connected structures. But the porous materials can suppress the natural convection effect in liquid zone, particularly for the PCMs with low viscosities, thereby leading to the different heat transfer performance at different regimes (solid, solid/liquid and liquid regions). This implies that the porous materials don’t necessarily mean they can always enhance heat transfer in every regime.


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