scholarly journals Condensation and vaporization heat transfer of low-GWP mixtures

2020 ◽  
Vol 1599 ◽  
pp. 012051
Author(s):  
S Bortolin ◽  
M Azzolin ◽  
A Berto ◽  
C Guzzardi ◽  
D Del Col
Energy ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 93 ◽  
pp. 854-863 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yiping Wang ◽  
Hailing Fu ◽  
Qunwu Huang ◽  
Yong Cui ◽  
Yong Sun ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 141 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Padovan ◽  
Stefano Bortolin ◽  
Marco Rossato ◽  
Sauro Filippeschi ◽  
Davide Del Col

This paper deals with vaporization heat transfer in a small diameter closed two-phase thermosyphon with a long evaporator and a short condenser, filled with water as operating fluid. The internal diameter of the evaporator is equal to 6.4 mm and the length-to-diameter ratio at the evaporator is equal to 166. A similar geometry is commonly used in vacuumed tube solar collectors. In the present investigation, the input power to the evaporator is provided by means of an electrical resistance wire wrapped around the external wall of the tube, while a water jacket is built at the condenser to reject the heat. The performance of the thermosyphon is described by using the wall temperature and the overall thermal resistance for different operating conditions: input power at the evaporator, cooling water temperature at the condenser, and inclination of the thermosyphon (30 deg, 60 deg, and 90 deg tilt angle to the horizontal plane). The present experimental data cover a range of heat flux between 1700 and 8000 W/m2 and saturation temperature between 28 °C and 72 °C. The vaporization heat transfer coefficients are compared with some correlations for closed two-phase thermosyphons displaying large disagreement. A new correlation is presented, which accurately predicts the present experimental values and other data by independent labs taken in closed two-phase thermosyphons, varying geometry and operating fluid (water, R134a, and ethanol).


1972 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. FERRELL ◽  
E. ALEXANDER ◽  
W. PIVER

Author(s):  
Husain Al Hashimi ◽  
Jungho Kim

Better understanding of phase change phenomena can be obtained through local measurements of the heat transfer process, which can’t be attained by traditional thermocouple point measurements. Infrared (IR) technology, which has been used by many researchers in the past, cannot be used under certain circumstances due to spectral transparency issues present in some materials. In the current study, Quantum Dots (QDs) are proposed as a novel tool for heat transfer measurements. QDs are nano-sized semiconductor materials which fluoresce upon excitation by blue or UV light. The light intensity emitted by QDs drops with temperature, which can be utilized to obtain the surface temperature distribution at a camera pixel resolution. If QDs are distributed on a surface of interest and optical access to that surface is available, the heat transfer processes can be examined using inexpensive equipment such as CCD/CMOS cameras and LED excitation sources. In this paper, a description of a QD based technique is given, where it is applied to visualize the heat transfer associated with ethanol droplet evaporation.


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