Bubble Lift-Off Size in Forced Convection Subcooled Boiling

2003 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rong Situ ◽  
Ye Mi ◽  
Xiaodong Sun ◽  
Mamoru Ishii ◽  
Michitrugu Mori

Forced convection subcooled boiling experiments were conducted in a BWR-scaled vertical upward annular channel. Water was used as the testing fluid, and the tests were performed at atmospheric pressure. A high-speed digital video camera was applied to capture the dynamics of the bubble nucleation process. Bubble lift-off diameters were obtained from the images for a total of 91 test conditions. A force balance analysis of a growing bubble was carried out. A constitutive relation for bubble lift-off size was obtained by correlating current water data and R113 data from literature. The proposed constitutive relation and experimental data agree well with each other.

Author(s):  
In-Cheol Chu ◽  
Chul-Hwa Song

A series of experiments were carried out to investigate the bubble nucleation to lift-off phenomena for a subcooled boiling flow in a vertical annulus channel. A high speed digital video camera was used to capture the dynamics of the bubble nucleation to lift-off process. A total of 148 recordings were made, and the bubble lift-off diameter and the bubble nucleation frequency were evaluated for 118 recordings up to now. The basic features of the lift-off diameter and nucleation frequency were addressed based on the present observation. A database for the bubble lift-off diameter was built by gathering and summarizing the data of Prodanovic et al., Situ et al., and the present work. The prediction capability of Unal’s model, Situ et al.’s model, and Prodanovic et al.’s correlation was evaluated against the database. The best prediction results were obtained by modifying the wall superheat correlation in Unal’s model.


2000 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Hetsroni ◽  
M. Gurevich ◽  
A. Mosyak ◽  
R. Rozenblit ◽  
L. P. Yarin

Abstract During subcooled boiling of pure water and water with cationic surfactants, the motion of bubbles and the temperature of the heated surface were recorded by both a high-speed video camera and an infrared radiometer. The results show that the bubble behavior and the heat transfer mechanism for the surfactant are quite different from those of clear water. Bubbles formed in Habon G solutions were much smaller man those in water and the surface was covered with them faster. Boiling hysteresis is found for degraded solutions. Dependencies of heat transfer coefficient for various solutions were obtained and compared. The boiling curves of surfactant are quite different from the boiling curve of pure water. Experimental results demonstrate that the heat transfer coefficient of the boiling process can be enhanced considerably by the addition of a small amount of Habon G. The experiments show that the limitations of the ER technique with respect to frequency response are outweighed by its unique capacity to measure wall temperature distribution with high spatial resolution over an area encompassing many nucleation sites and over long periods.


Author(s):  
Takahiro Arai ◽  
Masahiro Furuya

A high-temperature stainless-steel sphere was immersed into various salt solutions to test film boiling behavior at vapor film collapse. The film boiling behavior around the sphere was observed with a high-speed digital-video camera. Because salt additives enhanced condensation heat transfer, the observed vapor film was thinner. Surface temperature of the sphere was measured. Salt additives increased the quenching (vapor film collapse) temperature, because frequency of direct contact between sphere surface and coolant increased. Quenching temperature rises with increased salt concentration. The quenching temperature, however, approaches a constant value when the slat concentration is close to its saturation concentration. The quenching temperature is well correlated with ion molar concentration, which is a number density of ions, regardless of the type of hydrated salts.


Author(s):  
Kalpak P. Gatne ◽  
Milind A. Jog ◽  
Raj M. Manglik

A study of the normal impact of liquid droplets on a dry horizontal substrate is presented in this paper. The impact dynamics, spreading and recoil behavior are captured using a high-speed digital video camera at 2000 frames per second. A digital image processing software was used to determine the drop spread and height of the liquid on the surface from each frame. To ascertain the effects of liquid viscosity and surface tension, experiments were conducted with four liquids (water, ethanol, propylene glycol and glycerin) that have vastly different fluid properties. Three different Weber numbers (20, 40, and 80) were considered by altering the height from which the drop is released. The high-speed photographs of impact, spreading and recoil are shown and the temporal variations of dimensionless drop spread and height are provided in the paper. The results show that changes in liquid viscosity and surface tension significantly affect the spreading and recoil behavior. For a fixed Weber number, lower surface tension promotes greater spreading and higher viscosity dampens spreading and recoil. Using a simple scale analysis of energy balance, it was found that the maximum spread factor varies as Re1/5 when liquid viscosity is high and viscous effects govern the spreading behavior.


Author(s):  
Tomomichi Nakamura ◽  
Hiroshi Haruguchi ◽  
Hiroyuki Nakajima ◽  
Toyohiro Sawada ◽  
Kozo Sugiyama

The importance of the in-flow oscillation of a single cylinder in cross-flow has been highlighted since an accident in a FBR-type reactor. In-flow oscillations have also been observed in tube arrays. This report is an experimental study on this phenomenon using totally nine cylinders in a water tunnel. Six cases, one single cylinder, two & three cylinders in parallel & in tandem, and a nine cylinder bundle, are examined. Every cylinder can move only in in-flow direction. The motion of cylinders is measured by the strain gages and by a high-speed digital video camera. The results are compared with the visualized vortex motion.


Author(s):  
Tomomichi Nakamura ◽  
Takafumi Yoshikawa ◽  
Taku Yoshimura ◽  
Hironobu Kondo

The importance of the in-flow oscillation of a single cylinder in cross-flow has been spotlighted since an accident in a FBR-type reactor. However, the in-flow oscillation can be observed in tube arrays of heat exchangers. Previous reports show some interesting phenomena on the oscillation of cylinder arrays, which have a same pitch between cylinders. This paper shows the effect of the pitch ratio of a cylinder array on the characteristics of those phenomena, especially in in-flow direction, where every cylinder can move only in this direction. The motion of cylinders is measured by attached strain gages and by a high-speed digital video camera.


2018 ◽  
Vol 32 (23) ◽  
pp. 1850272 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuanyuan Wang ◽  
Pengfei Jia ◽  
Weidong Yang ◽  
Kai Peng ◽  
Sixiang Zhang

The purpose of this paper is to lessen the deviation of printing and to predict the nucleus size of binder droplet infiltration in three-dimensional printing (3DP) technology. The industrial CT is used to scan powders and the parameters of materials are calculated. A spherical model, which is based on the data from industrial CT scanning, predicts the nucleus size. The radius of the sphere is equal to the average radius of the sand particles. The spreading radius of binder droplet on the material is obtained by using the experimental method, and then the nucleus size is calculated by the equations. In order to do research on the process of droplet infiltration more intuitively, we analyze the effects of contact angle, porosity and drop height on the infiltration by using the software Comsol in the simulation. To verify the results of the simulation, the processes of infiltration are recorded by the high-speed digital video camera, and the nucleus size is observed by electron microscope. The study is important to conduct the infiltration experiments and provides a theoretical basis for optimization of process parameters in practical application.


2009 ◽  
Vol 102 (5) ◽  
pp. 379-384
Author(s):  
Ken-ichi Kaneko ◽  
Koichi Sakaguchi ◽  
Masato Inoue ◽  
Fujinobu Tanaka ◽  
Atsushi Takano ◽  
...  

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