Investigation of bubble behavior in gradient porous media under pool boiling conditions

2018 ◽  
Vol 103 ◽  
pp. 85-93 ◽  
Author(s):  
R.L. Huang ◽  
C.Y. Zhao ◽  
Z.G. Xu
2020 ◽  
Vol 142 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jin Sub Kim ◽  
Dong Hwan Shin ◽  
Yeonghwan Kim ◽  
Seung M. You ◽  
Jungho Lee

Abstract The pool boiling phenomena, which may occur at high heat flux in the planar heat pipe such as vapor chamber and thermal ground plane (TGP), were visually investigated in the vertical orientation by capturing the bubble behavior within a narrow gap between two plates using distilled water at 1 atm. The size of two copper plates is 80×80 mm2 and the 10×10 mm2 ceramic heater, which simulates the high power chip, was bonded to the backside of the bottom plate. The gap between two plates was adjusted from 3 mm to 0.5 mm using spacers. It was observed that the generated bubble spreads laterally throughout the channel between the plates as decreasing the gap. Thin liquid film forms beneath the flattened bubble and the thin film evaporation improves heat transfer at the narrow gaps of 3 and 1 mm. However, further reduction of the gap down to 0.5 mm brings about an increase of the dried region, resulting in the deterioration of boiling heat transfer. [This work was supported by the Civil-Military Technology Cooperation Program of the Institute of Civil-Military Technology Cooperation (ICMTC), with a grant funded by the Defense Acquisition Program Administration and the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy (Grant No. 18CM5017).]


Author(s):  
Chen Li ◽  
G. P. Peterson

The evaporation and pool boiling on micro porous coated surfaces have been shown to provide among the highest heat transfer rates achievable from any type of surfaces. The heat transfer modes in these surfaces, present a number of interesting similarities and also, some fundamental differences, which are the result of the liquid supply methods to the heated surface. For the evaporation from porous coated surfaces, the liquid return to the heated surface is assisted by the capillary pressure at the liquid-vapor interface; while for pool boiling, gravity is the principal driving force that rewets the surface. In order to better understand the physical phenomena that governs the flow behavior of both the liquid and vapor phases, and the heat transfer process inside the porous media, comprehensive comparisons between these return mechanisms and their respective characteristics, and the performance and the critical heat flux (CHF) for each have been made, based on similar physical situations. These systematic comparisons illustrate that at a lower heat flux, the evaporation and pool boiling curves are almost identical due to the similar heat transfer modes, i.e., convection and nucleate boiling. While with further increases in heat flux, the heat transfer performance of the evaporation on micro porous media is generally superior to pool boiling on an identical surface. This shift is believed to be due to the fact that for evaporation on micro porous media, the heat transfer mode is dominated by the film evaporation, while in pool boiling, it is principally the result of fully developed nucleate boiling. It was also observed that the impact of the effective thermal conductivity of the porous coating on pool boiling performance is larger than for evaporation heat transfer on the identical micro porous coated surfaces. In general, the experimental data indicated that the CHF for evaporation heat transfer is much higher than for pool boiling on the same surfaces. The mechanism of CHF for evaporation on porous coated surfaces is believed to be the capillary limit; while for pool boiling the limit is the result of the hydrodynamic instabilities. This difference in mechanisms is clearly demonstrated by the experimental observations, where initially, the dry out process of the porous coated surfaces during evaporation is gradual, while for pool boiling; the entire surface reaches dry out in a very short time. In addition, the sensitivity of the CHF to the thickness of the porous coatings at a constant volumetric porosity and pore size, as well as the various optimal volumetric porosity of the CHF at a given thickness, are clearly the results of the differences induced by the various CHF mechanisms.


2013 ◽  
Vol 388 ◽  
pp. 18-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ridho Irwansyah ◽  
Nandy Putra

The development of electronic components such as microprocessor requires a better thermal management system to overcome the high heat flux produce by the component. The method to absorb the heat produce by the microprocessor is still use the conduction or either natural or free convection which still in a single phase heat transfer. One of heat transfer method that suitable for a high heat flux application is pool boiling which has a two order of magnitude higher than of a single phase heat transfer and does not require a pump to move the fluid. In this study has been conducted the pool boiling experiment with four different porous media surface which are sintered copper 300 µm and 400 µm, copper screen mesh and stainless steel screen mesh with four different fluid which are Al2O3-Water 1%, 3% and 5%. The sintered copper 400 µm has shown a better heat transfer performance compared to the other porous media. The Water, Al2O3-Water 5% has shown a performance no better than Al2O3-Water 1% and 3%.


2019 ◽  
pp. 351-356
Author(s):  
Y. C. Kweon ◽  
M. H. Klm ◽  
H. J. Cho ◽  
I. S. Kang ◽  
S. J. Kim

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