Droplet Evaporation of Cu–Al2O3 Hybrid Nanofluid Over Its Residue and Copper Surfaces: Toward Developing a New Analytical Model

2020 ◽  
Vol 143 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Farooq Riaz Siddiqui ◽  
Chi Yan Tso ◽  
Sau Chung Fu ◽  
Huihe Qiu ◽  
Christopher Y. H. Chao

Abstract Droplet evaporation-based cooling techniques, such as the spray cooling, give high heat transfer rates by utilizing latent energy and are usually preferred in thermal applications. However, with the significant rise in heat dissipation levels for high heat flux devices, these devices cannot be thermally managed due to the limited cooling capacity of existing thermal fluids. In this paper, we report the evaporation of the Cu–Al2O3 hybrid nanofluid (HNF) droplet on a copper surface as well as its own residue surface, developed from the evaporation of the first Cu–Al2O3 HNF droplet. As the main novelty, we identify the critical residue size and investigate the residue size effect, above and below the critical residue size, on evaporation rate of the succeeding Cu–Al2O3 HNF droplet resting over a residue surface. We also develop a new analytical model to estimate the Cu–Al2O3 HNF droplet evaporation rate and compare our results with other existing models. The results show that the Cu–Al2O3 HNF droplet gives 17% higher evaporation rate than a water droplet on a copper surface. Also, the evaporation rate of the Cu–Al2O3 HNF droplet on a residue surface sharply increases by 106% with increasing residue size up to the critical residue size. However, further increasing the residue size above its critical value has a negligible effect on the droplet evaporation rate. Moreover, the evaporation rate of the Cu–Al2O3 HNF droplet on its residue surface is enhanced up to 104% when compared to a copper surface.

Author(s):  
Farooq Riaz Siddiqui ◽  
Chi Yan Tso ◽  
Sau Chung Fu ◽  
Huihe Qiu ◽  
Christopher Yu Hang Chao

Abstract Droplet evaporation is an efficient process as it removes a large amount of heat by using the latent energy, making it suitable for heat transfer applications. In this research, evaporation of the silver-graphene hybrid nanofluid (SGHF) droplet, because of its synergistic thermal conductivity, is investigated for substrate temperature in a range of 25–100 °C. The experiments for droplet evaporation were performed in an environmental facility for two droplet sizes, 3 μL and 30 μL volume, on a copper plate. A 100 W silicone heater mat was used to heat the copper plate from the underside, while two T-type thermocouples were used to monitor its surface temperature. As droplet evaporation ended, a porous residue was formed on the copper surface. Subsequently, a 3 μL volume of the SGHF droplet was dispensed on the porous residue surface. The results showed a tremendous rise in the evaporation rate (up to 160%) for the subsequent SGHF droplet sitting on the porous residue as compared to the non-wetted copper surface. Moreover, the evaporation rate of the SGHF droplet on the copper surface increased up to 56% as compared to the water droplet for a substrate temperature range of 25–100 °C.


Author(s):  
Farooq R. Siddiqui ◽  
Edwin C. Y. Tso ◽  
Sau C. Fu ◽  
Christopher Y. H. Chao ◽  
Huihe Qiu

Abstract Droplet evaporation is a complex phase change process with a wide range of cooling applications, such as spray cooling and dropwise hotspot cooling in microelectronics, to name a few. The hybrid nanofluid droplet evaporation and its residue effects on evaporation of the subsequent hybrid nanofluid droplet is investigated in this research. Silver-graphene (Ag-GNP) hybrid nanofluid exhibiting synergistic thermal properties is investigated and prepared by dispersing silver nanoparticles along with graphene nanoplatelets in water at 0.1% volume fraction and with different mixing ratios, followed by ultrasonication. The evaporation rate and wetting characteristics of a 3 μl volume of Ag-GNP hybrid nanofluid droplet on a copper surface were studied using an optical tensiometer. Once dried, the nanoporous structure of the residue surface was examined using a scanning electron microscope, while the surface roughness was measured using an optical profiler. Experiments were continued to further investigate the evaporation rate and wetting effects of the subsequent Ag-GNP hybrid nanofluid droplet over the residue surface. The results showed improved wetting characteristics, with 88% reduction in initial static contact angle and 163–196% enhancement in evaporation rate of the subsequent Ag-GNP hybrid nanofluid droplets over the residue surfaces as compared to the copper surface.


2020 ◽  
Vol 142 (7) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ya-Qiao Wang ◽  
Jia-Li Luo ◽  
Yi Heng ◽  
Dong-Chuan Mo ◽  
Shu-Shen Lyu

Abstract Boiling heat transfer is one of the most effective methods to meet the challenge of heat dissipation of high heat flux devices. A wetting hybrid surface has been shown to have better performance than the hydrophilic or hydrophobic surface. This kind of wetting hybrid modification is always carried out on a plain or flat surface. In this paper, polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) powders were coated on a superhydrophilic microcopper dendrite fin surface to build a wetting hybrid surface. The pool-boiling experimental results showed that after applying the coating, the wall superheat dramatically decreased to 8 K, which is 9 K lower than that on the original surface at 250 W·cm−2, and has a better performance than a silicon pin-fin-based wetting hybrid surface.


Author(s):  
Nihal E. Joshua ◽  
Denesh K. Ajakumar ◽  
Huseyin Bostanci

This study experimentally investigated the effect of hydrophobic patterned surfaces in nucleate boiling heat transfer. A dielectric liquid, HFE-7100, was used as the working fluid in the saturated boiling tests. Dielectric liquids are known to have highly-wetting characteristics. They tend to fill surface cavities that would normally trap vapor/gas, and serve as active nucleation sites during boiling. With the lack of these vapor filled cavities, boiling of a dielectric liquid leads to high incipience superheats and accompanying temperature overshoots. Heater samples in this study were prepared by applying a thin Teflon (AF400, Dupont) coating on 1-cm2 smooth copper surfaces following common photolithography techniques. Matching size thick film resistors, attached onto the copper samples, generated heat and simulated high heat flux electronic devices. Tests investigated the heater samples featuring circular pattern sizes between 40–100 μm, and corresponding pitch sizes between 80–200 μm. Additionally, a plain, smooth copper surface was tested to obtain reference data. Based on data, hydrophobic patterned surfaces effectively eliminated the temperature overshoot at boiling incipience, and considerably improved nucleate boiling performance in terms of heat transfer coefficient and critical heat flux over the reference surface. Hydrophobic patterned surfaces therefore demonstrated a practical surface modification method for heat transfer enhancement in immersion cooling applications.


Micromachines ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (9) ◽  
pp. 1080
Author(s):  
Wenzhe Song ◽  
Yanfeng Xu ◽  
Lihong Xue ◽  
Huajie Li ◽  
Chunsheng Guo

As a type of micro flat loop heat pipe, s-UTLHP (silicon-based ultra-thin loop heat pipe) is of great significance in the field of micro-scale heat dissipation. To prove the feasibility of s-UTLHP with high heat flux in a narrow space, it is necessary to study its heat transfer mechanism visually. In this paper, a structural design of s-UTLHP was proposed, and then, to realize the working fluid charging and visual experiment, an experimental system including a holding module, heating module, cooling module, data acquisition module, and vacuum chamber was proposed. Deionized water was selected as a working fluid in the experiment. The overall and micro phenomena of s-UTLHP during startup, as well as the evaporation and condensation phenomena of s-UTLHP during stable operation, were observed and analyzed. Finally, the failure phenomenon of s-UTLHP was analyzed, and several solutions were proposed. The observed phenomena and experimental conclusions can provide references for further related experimental research.


Author(s):  
Elizaveta Gatapova ◽  
Oleg Kabov

The present work focuses upon shear-driven liquid film evaporative cooling of high heat flux local heater. Thin evaporating liquid films may provide very high heat transfer rates and can be used for cooling of high power microelectronic systems. Thermocapillary convection in a liquid film falling down a locally heated substrate has recently been extensively studied. However, non-uniform heating effects remain only partially understood for shear-driven liquid films. The combined effects of evaporation, thermocapillarity and gas dynamics as well as formation of microscopic adsorbed film have not been studied. The effect of evaporation on heat and mass transfer for 2D joint flow of a liquid film and gas is theoretically and numerically investigated. The convective terms in the energy equations are taken into account. The calculations reveal that evaporation from film surface essential influences on heat removal from local heater. It is shown that the thermal boundary layer plays significant role for cooling local heater by evaporating thin liquid film. Measured by an infrared scanner temperature distribution at the film surface is compared with numerical data. Calculations satisfactorily describe the maximal surface temperature value.


Author(s):  
D. V. Zaitsev ◽  
O. A. Kabov

The paper focuses upon shear-driven liquid film evaporative cooling of high-speed computer chips. Thin liquid films may provide very high heat transfer rates, however development of cooling system based on thin film technology requires significant advances in fundamental research. The paper presents new experimental data on flow and breakdown of a liquid film driven by the action of a forced gas flow in a horizontal minichannel (2 mm high), heated from a 22×6.55 mm heater. A map of isothermal flow regimes is plotted and the lengths of smooth region and region of 2D/3D wave occurrence are measured. The scenario of liquid film breakdown under heating is found to differ widely for different flow regimes. It is revealed that the critical heat flux at which film breakdown occurs for a shear-driven liquid film can be several times higher than that for a gravitationally-driven liquid film. This fact makes shear-driven liquid films very promising in high heat flux cooling applications.


2011 ◽  
Vol 175 ◽  
pp. 335-341
Author(s):  
Xi Bing Li ◽  
Chang Long Yang ◽  
Gong Di Xu ◽  
Wen Yuan ◽  
Shi Gang Wang

With heat flux increasing and cooling space decreasing in microelectronic and chemical products, micro heat pipe has become an ideal heat dissipation device in high heat-flux products. Through the analysis of its working principle, the factors that affect its heat transfer limits and the patterns in which copper powders are arrayed in circular cavity, this paper first established a mathematical model for the crucial factors in affecting heat transfer limits in a circular micro heat pipe with a sintered wick, i.e. a theoretical model for capillary limit, and then verified its validity through experimental investigations. The study lays a powerful theoretical foundation for designing and manufacturing circular micro heat pipes with sintered wicks.


Author(s):  
Lanlan Li ◽  
Shiqiang Liang ◽  
Dawei Tang ◽  
Liang Chen

Compared with conventional filmwise condensation, dropwise condensation has the advantage of high heat transfer coefficient when properly enhanced. To better understand the inherent mechanism of this outstanding performance and optimize the structure of the condensation surface, this paper focuses on the visualization experiments of dropwise condensation on a superhydrophobic surface to study the dynamic behaviors of droplet nucleation and growth. The surface is fabricated by chemically growing an n-octadecanethiol self-assembled monolayer coating with microscopic roughness on a copper surface. Some characteristics of interest such as the droplet nucleation, the droplet diameter, the number and the path of the droplets are obtained using image processing software. The experimental results indicate that the nucleation sites of the droplets are fixed, which in turn verifies the droplet nucleation theory. In addition, the nucleation of the small droplets together with the coalescence of the existing droplets contributes significantly to the variation of the number of the droplets.


2010 ◽  
Vol 132 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yueguang Deng ◽  
Jing Liu

Broad societal needs have focused attention on technologies that can effectively dissipate huge amount of heat from high power density electronic devices. Liquid metal cooling, which has been proposed in recent years, is fast emerging as a novel and promising solution to meet the requirements of high heat flux optoelectronic devices. In this paper, a design and implementation of a practical liquid metal cooling device for heat dissipation of high performance CPUs was demonstrated. GaInSn alloy with the melting point around 10°C was adopted as the coolant and a tower structure was implemented so that the lowest coolant amount was used. In order to better understand the design procedure and cooling capability, several crucial design principles and related fundamental theories were demonstrated and discussed. In the experimental study, two typical prototypes have been fabricated to evaluate the cooling performance of this liquid metal cooling device. The compared results with typical water cooling and commercially available heat pipes show that the present device could achieve excellent cooling capability. The thermal resistance could be as low as 0.13°C/W, which is competitive with most of the latest advanced CPU cooling devices in the market. Although the cost (about 70 dollars) is still relatively high, it could be significantly reduced to less than 30 dollars with the optimization of flow channel. Considering its advantages of low thermal resistance, capability to cope with extremely high heat flux, stability, durability, and energy saving characteristic when compared with heat pipe and water cooling, this liquid metal cooling device is quite practical for future application.


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