scholarly journals Study on the Instability of Two-Phase Flow in the Heat-Absorbing Tube of Trough Solar Collector

2017 ◽  
Vol 2017 ◽  
pp. 1-8
Author(s):  
Ying Zhang ◽  
Peiyao Liu ◽  
Peisheng Li ◽  
Yue Chen ◽  
Yanni Pan

The Marangoni effect and Rayleigh-Benard effect in the two-phase region of solar trough heat-absorbing tube are simulated by FTM (front tracking method). Considering the Marangoni effect alone, although surface tension gradient and surface tension affect the interface wave, the two effects have different characteristics. The surface tension gradient caused by the temperature gradient is one of the factors that swing the interface. The amplitude attenuation of the interface wave decreases with the increase of the Marangoni number (Ma). In general, the surface tension gradient enhances the convection opposite to the temperature gradient. Under the gravity field, the Rayleigh-Benard effect influences the development of the vortex structure in the flow field, which in turn affects the velocity gradient near the interface to influence the evolution of the interface fluctuation. In a small Rayleigh number (Ra), the buoyancy convection reduces the velocity gradient, thus suppressing the evolution of the interfacial wave. In the range of Ra < 4.0E4, the larger the Ra, the stronger the inhibitory effect. However, when the Ra number is large (Ra > 4.0E4), the situation is just the opposite. The larger the Ra is, the stronger the promoting effect is.

Author(s):  
Zhihao Chen ◽  
Yoshio Utaka

When a bulk temperature gradient was applied to a horizontal condensing surface in Marangoni dropwise condensation, the spontaneous movement of condensate drops occurred. The characteristics of the condensate drop movement in a condensate system of water and ethanol binary vapor mixture were experimentally investigated for a wide range of bulk temperature gradients and for various mass fractions. Drops moved from the low-temperature side to the high-temperature side of the heat transfer surface. When the initial drop distance was adopted as a parameter for the Marangoni force acting on the condensate drop together with the surface tension gradient corresponding to the surface temperature of the condensing surface, the drop moving velocity correlated well as a function of both the surface tension gradient and the initial drop distance. In the range of larger initial drop distances, the condensate drop velocity increases as the initial drop distance is reduced and it subsequently decreases after the velocity reaches its maximum value under an almost constant bulk surface tension gradient.


Author(s):  
Yanjie Yang ◽  
Zan Wu ◽  
Xiaoqian Chen ◽  
Bengt Sundén ◽  
Yiyong Huang

Wettability gradient in radial direction and evaporation rate gradient can cause droplet motion on a solid surface. Here a theoretical model is proposed. Besides, an equation of droplet velocity is derived on a solid surface. We consider the wettability and evaporation rate gradients are mainly caused by the chemical composition and surface roughness, only along the radial direction. Surface tension at the liquid-vapor interface is constant as it is assumed that the temperature does not change during the whole process. Thus, Marangoni effect induced by the liquid-vapor surface tension gradient is neglected. Besides, as droplet size is set as less than the capillary length (l=γ/ρg), the gravity effect is ignored as well. The velocity at the droplet center on a gradient surface along the radial direction is half of that along the x-direction. With the simulation of water droplet, the center velocity decreases with time and the droplet radius increases at the beginning part and then decreases.


2015 ◽  
Vol 1101 ◽  
pp. 467-470
Author(s):  
Elaine Lim ◽  
Yew Mun Hung

This paper presents a theoretical study on the flow mechanism of different types of working fluids incorporated with Marangoni effect in a microelectronics cooling device. It is known that surface tension gradient effect or thermocapillary effect can be induced by temperature gradient which leads to the thermocapillary flow. By adding a small quantity of alcohol into the pure working fluid, the characteristics of surface tension can be altered without changing other thermo physical properties of the working fluid. A theoretical model is employed to focus on the suppression of thermocapillary effect in evaporating thin liquid film. The study reveals the fluid flow mechanism of a working fluid can be altered with thermocapillary effect. Thermal performance of microelectronics cooling devices can also be enhanced by utilizing aqueous solution as the working fluid.


Soft Matter ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiao Ye ◽  
Si-Cong Tan ◽  
Lei Wang ◽  
Jing Liu

The Marangoni effect, induced by the surface tension gradient resulting from the gradient of temperature, concentration, or electric potential gradient along the surface, is commonly utilized to manipulate a droplet....


1996 ◽  
Vol 118 (1) ◽  
pp. 103-109 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. R. McGillis ◽  
V. P. Carey

The Marangoni effect on the critical heat flux (CHF) condition in pool boiling of binary mixtures has been identified and its effect has been quantitatively estimated with a modified model derived from hydrodynamics. The physical process of CHF in binary mixtures, and models used to describe it, are examined in the light of recent experimental evidence, accurate mixture properties, and phase equilibrium revealing a correlation to surface tension gradients and volatility. A correlation is developed from a heuristic model including the additional liquid restoring force caused by surface tension gradients. The CHF condition was determined experimentally for saturated methanol/water, 2-propanol/water, and ethylene glycol/water mixtures, over the full range of concentrations, and compared to the model. The evidence in this study demonstrates that in a mixture with large differences in surface tension, there is an additional hydrodynamic restoring force affecting the CHF condition.


2006 ◽  
Vol 9 (05) ◽  
pp. 530-542 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hadi Nasrabadi ◽  
Kassem Ghorayeb ◽  
Abbas Firoozabadi

Summary We present formulation and numerical solution of two-phase multicomponent diffusion and natural convection in porous media. Thermal diffusion, pressure diffusion, and molecular diffusion are included in the diffusion expression from thermodynamics of irreversible processes. The formulation and the numerical solution are used to perform initialization in a 2D cross section. We use both homogeneous and layered media without and with anisotropy in our calculations. Numerical examples for a binary mixture of C1/C3 and a multicomponent reservoir fluid are presented. Results show a strong effect of natural convection in species distribution. Results also show that there are at least two main rotating cells at steady state: one in the gas cap, and one in the oil column. Introduction Proper initialization is an important aspect of reliable reservoir simulations. The use of the Gibbs segregation condition generally cannot provide reliable initialization in hydrocarbon reservoirs. This is caused, in part, by the effect of thermal diffusion (caused by the geothermal temperature gradient), which cannot be neglected in some cases; thermal diffusion might be the main phenomenon affecting compositional variation in hydrocarbon reservoirs, especially for near-critical gas/condensate reservoirs (Ghorayeb et al. 2003). Generally, temperature increases with increasing burial depth because heat flows from the Earth's interior toward the surface. The temperature profile, or geothermal gradient, is related to the thermal conductivity of a body of rock and the heat flux. Thermal conductivity is not necessarily uniform because it depends on the mineralogical composition of the rock, the porosity, and the presence of water or gas. Therefore, differences in thermal conductivity between adjacent lithologies can result in a horizontal temperature gradient. Horizontal temperature gradients in some offshore fields can be observed because of a constant water temperature (approximately 4°C) in different depths in the seabed floor. The horizontal temperature gradient causes natural convection that might have a significant effect on species distribution (Firoozabadi 1999). The combined effects of diffusion (pressure, thermal, and molecular) and natural convection on compositional variation in multicomponent mixtures in porous media have been investigated for single-phase systems (Riley and Firoozabadi 1998; Ghorayeb and Firoozabadi 2000a).The results from these references show the importance of natural convection, which, in some cases, overrides diffusion and results in a uniform composition. Natural convection also can result in increased horizontal compositional variation, an effect similar to that in a thermogravitational column (Ghorayeb and Firoozabadi 2001; Nasrabadi et al. 2006). The combined effect of convection and diffusion on species separation has been the subject of many experimental studies. Separation in a thermogravitational column with both effects has been measured widely (Schott 1973; Costeseque 1982; El Mataaoui 1986). The thermogravitational column consists of two isothermal vertical plates with different temperatures separated by a narrow space. The space can be either without a porous medium or filled with a porous medium. The thermal diffusion, in a binary mixture, causes one component to segregate to the hot plate and the other to the cold plate. Because of the density gradient caused by temperature and concentration gradients, convection flow occurs and creates a concentration difference between the top and bottom of the column. Analytical and numerical models have been presented to analyze the experimental results (Lorenz and Emery 1959; Jamet et al. 1992; Nasrabadi et al. 2006). The experimental and theoretical studies show that the composition difference between the top and bottom of the column increases with permeability until an optimum permeability is reached. Then, the composition difference declines as permeability increases. The process in a thermogravitational column shows the significance of the convection from a horizontal temperature gradient.


1996 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 72-81 ◽  
Author(s):  
ALI G. BUDIMAN ◽  
C. FLORIJANTO ◽  
J. W. PALEN

2017 ◽  
Vol 28 (09) ◽  
pp. 1750120 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yong Peng ◽  
Yun Fei Mao ◽  
Bo Wang ◽  
Bo Xie

Equations of State (EOS) is crucial in simulating multiphase flows by the pseudo-potential lattice Boltzmann method (LBM). In the present study, the Peng and Robinson (P–R) and Carnahan and Starling (C–S) EOS in the pseudo-potential LBM with Exact Difference Method (EDM) scheme for two-phase flows have been compared. Both of P–R and C–S EOS have been used to study the two-phase separation, surface tension, the maximum two-phase density ratio and spurious currents. The study shows that both of P–R and C–S EOS agree with the analytical solutions although P–R EOS may perform better. The prediction of liquid phase by P–R EOS is more accurate than that of air phase and the contrary is true for C–S EOS. Predictions by both of EOS conform with the Laplace’s law. Besides, adjustment of surface tension is achieved by adjusting [Formula: see text]. The P–R EOS can achieve larger maximum density ratio than C–S EOS under the same [Formula: see text]. Besides, no matter the C–S EOS or the P–R EOS, if [Formula: see text] tends to 0.5, the computation is prone to numerical instability. The maximum spurious current for P–R is larger than that of C–S. The multiple-relaxation-time LBM still can improve obviously the numerical stability and can achieve larger maximum density ratio.


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