PRELIMINARY CHARACTERIZATION RESULTS ON A HIGH PERFORMANCE, COMPACT MICRO-GROOVED HEAT EXCHANGER SURFACE FOR PHASE CHANGE HEAT TRANSFER

Equipment ◽  
2006 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. AL-Hajri ◽  
Dr. Mike Ohadi ◽  
S. V. Dessiatoun
Author(s):  
M. M. Kabir ◽  
Sangsoo Lee

Abstract Recent leaps in heat dissipation make it difficult for typical heat exchangers to meet the requirements of the advanced applications even with the maximally obtainable heat transfer performance associated with a single-phase process. Especially high heat flux applications such as thermal management in microelectronics, advanced material processing, and nuclear fusion reactors require extreme heat transfer methods to overcome the current limits. In this study, a heat exchanger adopting simultaneously two-opposite, phase-change heat transfer processes (internal flow boiling and external condensation) was proposed and analytically investigated. The phase-change heat transfer analyses were conducted for internal flow boiling and external condensation at a test section and the heat transfer performances were compared with that of a system with an internal single-phase, liquid flow process. It is found that the proposed heat exchanger configuration with an internal flow boiling can substantially enhance the heat transfer performances and provide better methods to manage the temperature difference comparing to those with an internal single-phase heat transfer due to its significant increase in a heat transfer coefficients and constant temperatures during phase-change processes. Additionally, this study also explains the design for a test rig to evaluate and validate the results in detail. The test rig consists of an internal flow boiling loop with a test section, an external condensation loop, sensors, auxiliary monitoring parts, and controlling and data acquisition systems. Thermodynamic cycle, pressure drop, and heat transfer analyses were conducted to determine the conditions and the specifications of components and sensors for the test rig.


1981 ◽  
Vol 103 (4) ◽  
pp. 720-726 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. G. Bathelt ◽  
R. Viskanta

The effectiveness of extended surfaces on a horizontal, cylindrical heat source/sink was studied experimentally during solid-liquid phase change heat transfer. Melting and freezing experiments were performed in a test cell suitable for photographic and shadowgraphic observations using a circular cylinder with three rectangular fins parallel to the axis and evenly distributed around the circumference of the heat exchanger. Results are reported for n-heptadecane as the phase change material. Orientation of fins on the heat exchanger with respect to the gravitational field are found to have more influence on the melting than on the freezing processes. The use of fins was found to be more effective for melting than for freezing. The instantaneous local and circumferentially averaged heat transfer coefficients at the heat source surface for melting from a cylinder with fins were usually within ±20 percent of those for melting from a bare cylinder. During solidification the degree of heat transfer enhancement due to finning is greatest when the frozen layer is thin and decreases as the layer grows thicker.


2010 ◽  
Vol 240 (10) ◽  
pp. 2409-2414 ◽  
Author(s):  
Piyush Sabharwall ◽  
Mike Patterson ◽  
Vivek Utgikar ◽  
Fred Gunnerson

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