An Experimental Study of Mesh Type Flat Heat Pipes

2011 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 167-176 ◽  
Author(s):  
L.-H. Chien ◽  
Y.-C. Shih

ABSTRACTFlat heat pipes having mesh capillaries were investigated experimentally in this study. An apparatus was designed to test thermal performance of plate type copper water heat pipe having one or two layers of #50 or #80 mesh capillary structures with 5 to 50 W heat input. The working fluid, water, is charged in volumes equivalent to 25%, 33%, or 50% of the internal space. In addition to horizontal orientation, heat pipes were tested with the evaporator section elevated up to 40 degree inclination angle. Temperature distribution of the heat pipe was measured, and the evaporator, adiabatic and condensation resistances were calculated separately. The effects of mesh size, charge volume fraction, and inclination angle on thermal resistance were discussed. In general, the #80 mesh yielded lower thermal resistance than the #50 mesh. Inclination angle has a more significant effect on condenser than evaporator. Analysis of evaporation and condensation in flat heat pipes was conducted and semi-empirical correlations were derived. The present evaporation correlation predicts evaporation resistance between −20% and +30%, and the condensation correlation predicts most condensation resistance data within ±30% for 25% and 33% charge volume fraction.

Author(s):  
Liang-Han Chien ◽  
Y.-C. Shih

In this study plate type heat pipes having mesh capillaries were investigated experimentally and theoretically. A test apparatus was designed to test thermal performance of plate type copper-water heat pipe having one or two layers of #50 or #80 mesh capillary structures with 5-to-50 W heat input. The working fluid, water is charged with 25% or 33% volume of the heat pipe internal space. In addition to horizontal orientation, the heat pipes were tested with the evaporator section elevated up to 40 degree inclination angle. Temperature distribution of the heat pipe was measured, and the evaporator, adiabatic and condensation resistances of the heat pipe were calculated separated. The effects of mesh size, charge volume, and inclination angle on each thermal resistance were discussed. In general, the #80 mesh yields lower thermal resistances than the #50 mesh; inclination angle has more significant effect on condenser than evaporator. Theoretical models of evaporation and condensation in flat heat pipes were proposed to interpolate the experimental results. The present evaporation model predicts the experimental data of evaporation resistance between −20% and +30%, and the condensation model predicts most condensation resistance data within ±30%.


Volume 3 ◽  
2004 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Kempers ◽  
A. Robinson ◽  
C. Ching ◽  
D. Ewing

A study was performed to experimentally characterize the effect of fluid loading on the heat transport performance of wicked heat pipes. In particular, experiments were performed to characterize the performance of heat pipes with insufficient fluid to saturate the wick and excess fluid for a variety of orientations. It was found that excess working fluid in the heat pipe increased the thermal resistance of the heat pipe, but increased maximum heat flux through the pipe in a horizontal orientation. The thermal performance of the heat pipe was reduced when the amount of working fluid was less than required to saturate the wick, but the maximum heat flux through the heat pipe was significantly reduced at all orientations. It was also found in this case the performance of this heat pipe deteriorated once dry-out occurred.


Author(s):  
Mehdi Taslimifar ◽  
Maziar Mohammadi ◽  
Mohammad Hassan Saidi ◽  
Hossein Afshin ◽  
Mohammad Behshad Shafii ◽  
...  

In the present research an experimental investigation is performed to explore the effects of working fluid, heat input, ferrofluid concentration, magnets location, and inclination angle on the thermal performance of an Open Loop Pulsating Heat Pipe (OLPHP). Obtained results show that using ferrofluid can improve the thermal performance and applying a magnetic field on the water based ferrofluid decreases the thermal resistance. It shows that at an inclination angle of the OLPHP to be zero, the thermal performance of the present OLPHP reduces. Best heat transfer capability was achieved at 67.5 degree relative to horizontal axis for all of working fluids. Variation of the magnets location leads to a different thermal resistance in the OLPHP charged with ferrofluid.


Heat pipes are deliberated to be effective heat dissipation devices compared to other types of heat sinks due to their high effective thermal conductivity. Because of the flexibility in the design and layout of heat pipe turns along the heat source, pulsating heat pipes have gained popularity. One of the parameters that have the mainimpact on the presentation of CLPHP is the thermo physical properties of the working fluid. The properties of the working fluid affect the temperature difference between the evaporator and the condenser which in turn affect the thermal resistance of the CLPHP. In this connection, the influence of different working fluids is experimentally investigated on a two loop CLPHP, varying the evaporator heat flux. Pure fluids, viz., water, acetone, benzene and binary mixture, viz., Acetone-water and Benzene-water are utilized on working fluids. The heat input considered at the evaporator is 32W, 48W and 60W. The filling ratio is kept as 50 %. The results show that among the working fluids considered for the study, acetone exhibits least thermal resistance among the pure fluids at all heat fluxes considered in the analysis, while Acetone-water mixture has exhibited least thermal resistance among the water based mixtures.


Author(s):  
Kathryn Nikkanen ◽  
Christian G. Lu ◽  
Masahiro Kawaji

Improved miniaturization and a trend towards increasingly dense and compact architectures have led to unmanageably high heat fluxes in electronic components. In order to keep temperatures at operational levels more advanced cooling solutions are being required that go beyond the solid heat sink and forced convection. Pulsating heat pipes made out of multi port extrusion tubing are a proposed solution. Typically, gas-liquid slug flow occurs in the serpentine channel imbedded in the pulsating heat pipe. Vapour is produced in the heated section and condensed in the cooled section located at opposite ends of the heat pipe. In this work, experiments were conducted on four Multi-Port Extruded (MPE) aluminum tubing heat pipes with different internal structures: rectangular channel looped, rectangular channel unlooped, triangular channel looped, and triangular channel unlooped. The effect of changing the working fluid (ethanol or de-ionized water), fill ratio, and orientation were measured and compared for the different heat pipes. It was found that most of the heat pipes performed better with ethanol than de-ionized water. Only the looped rectangular channel heat pipe performed satisfactorily with de-ionized water, which is attributed both to the larger channel size and the looped architecture. The unlooped heat pipes performed best at the lowest fill ratios (10%) while the looped heat pipes showed their best performances between 30 and 50% with marked decrease at the lower and higher fill ratios. Both looped heat pipes performed poorly in horizontal orientation as compared to vertical, however, the unlooped heat pipes performed quite well in both orientations. This may be more the effect of the fill ratio on horizontal performance as literature suggests that horizontal orientation requires a lower fill ratio to perform satisfactorily.


Author(s):  
Ahmed Imtiaz Uddin ◽  
A. S. M. Atiqul Islam ◽  
Chowdhury Md. Feroz

An experimental study is performed to investigate the effect of geometry on the performance of miniature heat pipe (MHP). The experiment is conducted with circular and square MHPs having the same hydraulic diameter of 5 mm and length of 150 mm with acetone as the working fluid. The major findings in the investigation are as follows. At a constant heat flux, coolant flow rate and inclination angle, wall temperatures of evaporator section of circular MHP are higher than that of the square MHP. With the decrease in both inclination angle and coolant flow rate, the rate of increase in wall temperature of the evaporator section for circular MHP is higher than that of square MHP. Thermal resistance of the circular MHP is almost independent of coolant flow rate but for square MHP, thermal resistance decreases with the increase in coolant flow rate. Again at a constant coolant flow rate, heat flux and inclination angle, the thermal resistance for square MHP shows much smaller value than that of circular MHP. Overall heat transfer coefficient for square MHP is maximed at vertical orientation.


2011 ◽  
Vol 110-116 ◽  
pp. 1879-1885
Author(s):  
Hyo Jun Ha ◽  
Ji Hun Park ◽  
Seok Pil Jang

In this paper, thermal characteristics of miniature heat pipes with grooved wick and water-based multiwalled carbon nanotubes(MWCNT) nanofluids(0.1, 0.2, and 0.5 vol.%) as working fluids are experimentally investigated. The thermal conductivity and thermal resistances are measured and compared with those of DI water. The thermal conductivity of water-based MWCNT nandfluids is enhanced by up to 29% compared with that of DI water. Experiments are performed under the same evaporation temperature condition. The thermal resistance of heat pipe is reduced from 30% to 35.2% as the volume fraction of nanoparticles inceasing from 0.1% to 0.5%. Finally, based on the experimental results, we present the reduction of the thermal resistances of the heat pipes compared with conventional heat pipes cannot be explained by only the thermal conductivity of water-based MWCNT nanofluids.


Author(s):  
Sukhvinder Kang ◽  
Randy Cook ◽  
Dave Gailus

In recent years heat pipes have become widely use in high performance air-cooled heat sinks for cooling electronics equipment. Such heat sinks rely on the heat pipes to collect heat from small high heat flux sources, transport it over some distance, and spread the heat efficiently to a volume of fins where the heat is transferred to an air flow stream by convection. When used effectively, heat pipes enable heat sinks that have low thermal resistance and low mass. For the heat sink to be successful, the heat pipes must also have sufficient heat transport capacity. To deliver their design thermal resistance and heat transport capacity, heat pipes need to be manufactured with well-controlled wick characteristics, working fluid fill volume and minimal residual non-condensable gases. It is standard procedure for heat pipe manufacturing companies to test 100 percent of the heat pipes they manufacture. The most commonly used production test is designed to rapidly show whether or not a heat pipe functions as a heat pipe. On a sampling basis, manufacturers also test the heat transport capacity of their heat pipes. There is no rapid test that can verify that any specific heat pipe will achieve the desired operational life — this is achieved by validation of the manufacturing process and adequate manufacturing process controls. In this paper we describe a test method and apparatus that can be used to rapidly test whether a heat pipe has the required thermal resistance at the specified heat transport capacity. The apparatus is capable of testing heat pipes over a wide range of diameters and lengths in their end use configuration (with bends and flattened regions). The key design criteria for the test apparatus is described and test data for several application specific heat pipes is presented.


2013 ◽  
Vol 651 ◽  
pp. 728-735 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nandy Putra ◽  
Wayan Nata Septiadi ◽  
Ridho Irwansyah

Heat pipes have been widely used as one of the alternative methods to absorb more heat in the cooling systems of electronic devices. One of the ways to improve the thermal performance of heat pipes is to change the fluid transport properties and flow features of working fluids using nanofluids. The purpose of this research was to investigate the effect of Al2O3-water nanofluids concentration and fluid loading to the thermal resistance between evaporator and adiabatic section of copper straight sintered copper powder wick heat pipe. In this research, sintered powder wick heat pipes were manufactured and tested to determine the thermal resistance of the sintered powder wick heat pipes which charged with water and Al2O3-water nanofluids. The concentrations of the nanoparticles were varied from 1 %, 3% and 5 % of the volume of the base fluid. The result shows that Al2O3-water nanofluids have the ability to reduce the temperature at the evaporator section and the thermal resistance of heat pipe. The increase in nanofluids concentration could give significant effect to reduce the thermal resistance of heat pipes. The amount of working fluid charged into the heat pipes also gives an effect in heat pipes thermal resistance, where the thermal resistance was lower when the heat pipe was charged with 60% of its volume. The formation of coating layer at sintered powder wick also can fixed the wick porosity and cause roughness on the surface of granular pore which the increased of capillary could give the effect for enhancement of heat pipe performance.


Author(s):  
Tarigonda Hari Prasad ◽  
Pol Reddy Kukutla ◽  
P. Mallikarjuna Rao ◽  
R. Meenakshi Reddy

Pulsating heat pipes (PHP) receives heat from the working fluid distributes itself naturally in the form of liquid–vapor system, i.e., receiving heat from one end and transferring it to other end by a pulsating action of the liquid–vapor system. Pulsating heat pipes have more advantages than other heat pipes. The problem identified is, to calculate the performance of the pulsating heat pipes with respect to different inclinations using various parameters. In this paper, experiment on performance of closed single loop pulsating heat pipe (CLPHP) using water as a working fluid is considered. The parameters such as thermal resistance (Rth), heat transfer coefficient (h), and variation of temperature with respect to time for the given input at different inclinations such as 0°, 45°, and 90° are taken for the present work. Water is used as the working fluid and is subjected to 50% filling ratio and vacuumed at a pressure of 2300Pa. The performance is calculated at different inclinations of the CLPHP with single turn/loop. The factors such as heat transfer coefficient, thermal resistance, time taken for heating the pulsating heat pipe with the given input are calculated. Finally, it has been concluded that is preferable orientation for PHP and it was found be at vertical orientation i.e., at 90° inclination, because more pulsating action is taken place at this inclination and henceforth, heat transfer rate is faster at this inclination.


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