Effective thermal conductivity measurements by the transient hot-wire method: investigation of the interpretation procedure of experimental data

1997 ◽  
Vol 29 (3) ◽  
pp. 295-307 ◽  
Author(s):  
Malika Baklouti ◽  
André Laurent
2008 ◽  
Vol 130 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Calvin H. Li ◽  
Wesley Williams ◽  
Jacopo Buongiorno ◽  
Lin-Wen Hu ◽  
G. P. Peterson

Nanofluids are being studied for their potential to enhance heat transfer, which could have a significant impact on energy generation and storage systems. However, only limited experimental data on metal and metal-oxide based nanofluids, showing enhancement of the thermal conductivity, are currently available. Moreover, the majority of the data currently available have been obtained using transient methods. Some controversy exists as to the validity of the measured enhancement and the possibility that this enhancement may be an artifact of the experimental methodology. In the current investigation, Al2O3∕water nanofluids with normal diameters of 47nm at different volume fractions (0.5%, 2%, 4%, and 6%) have been investigated, using two different methodologies: a transient hot-wire method and a steady-state cut-bar method. The comparison of the measured data obtained using these two different experimental systems at room temperature was conducted and the experimental data at higher temperatures were obtained with steady-state cut-bar method and compared with previously reported data obtained using a transient hot-wire method. The arguments that the methodology is the cause of the observed enhancement of nanofluids effective thermal conductivity are evaluated and resolved. It is clear from the results that at room temperature, both the steady-state cut-bar and transient hot-wire methods result in nearly identical values for the effective thermal conductivity of the nanofluids tested, while at higher temperatures, the onset of natural convection results in larger measured effective thermal conductivities for the hot-wire method than those obtained using the steady-state cut-bar method. The experimental data at room temperature were also compared with previously reported data at room temperature and current available theoretical models, and the deviations of experimental data from the predicted values are presented and discussed.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Hayes ◽  
Faezeh Masooomi ◽  
Philipp Schimmels ◽  
Kelvin Randhir ◽  
James Klausner ◽  
...  

Abstract The effective thermal conductivity of packed beds of magnesium-manganese oxide pellets is a crucial parameter for engineering Magnesium Manganese Oxide (Mg-Mn-O) thermochemical energy storage devices. We have measured the effective thermal conductivity of a packed bed of 3.66 ±0.516 mm sized magnesium manganese oxide (Mn to Mg molar ratio of 1:1) pellets in the temperature range of 300 to 1400°C. Since the material is electrically conductive at temperatures above 600°C, the sheathed transient hot wire method is used for measurements. Raw data is analyzed using the Blackwell solution to extract the bed thermal conductivity. The effective thermal conductivity standard deviation is less than 10% for a minimum of three repeat measurements at each temperature. Experimental results show an increase in the effective thermal conductivity with temperature from 0.50 W/m °C around 300°C to 1.81 W/m °C close to 1400°C. We propose a dual porosity model to express the effective thermal conductivity as a function of temperature. This model also considers the effect of radiation within the bed, as this is the dominant heat transfer mode at high temperatures. The proposed model accounts for micro-scale pellet porosity, macro-scale bed porosity, pellet size, solid thermal conductivity (phonon transport), and radiation (photon transport). The coefficient of determination between the proposed model and the experimental results is greater than 0.90.


2017 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 1195-1202 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrej Stanimirovic ◽  
Emila Zivkovic ◽  
Nenad Milosevic ◽  
Mirjana Kijevcanin

Transient hot wire method is considered a reliable and precise technique for measuring the thermal conductivity of liquids. The present paper describes a new transient hot wire experimental set-up and its initial testing. The new apparatus was tested by performing thermal conductivity measurements on substances whose reference thermophysical properties data existed in literature, namely on pure toluene and double distilled deionized water. The values of thermal conductivity measured in the temperature range 25 to 45 ?C deviated +2.2% to +3% from the literature data, while the expanded measurement uncertainty was estimated to be ?4%.


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