scholarly journals Самопроизвольное (спонтанное) вскипание затопленных струй, генерируемых при коллапсе паровых пузырьков

Author(s):  
Т.П. Адамова ◽  
В.М. Чудновский ◽  
Д.С. Елистратов

The effect of secondary spontaneous boiling of submerged jets formed during the collapse of vapor bubbles during the bulk boiling of water subcooled to the saturation temperature at the end of a laser optical fiber is experimentally discovered.

Author(s):  
Steve Q. Cai

When vapor bubbles are subjected to suddenly reduced pressure or immediate subcooling, it may rapidly condense, rupture, and generate cavitation corrosions. This phenomenon often occurs behind the blade of a rapidly rotating propeller or on any surface vibrating in liquid with sufficient amplitude and acceleration. In this article, we reported cavitation and its corrosive collapse occurring in capillary tubes, called pulsating heat pipes. Visualization images of cut and opened tubes show that internal copper surface was seriously etched after a certain period of operation. Sub-millimeter etching pits are observed on the tube internal surface. Copper particles in size of a few hundred micrometers are also found in the reclaimed operating fluid. Starting from this finding, the temperature effect of performance is analyzed to understand the cavitation occurrence and collapse. Pulsating heat pipe requires a certain temperature difference between the evaporator and condenser sections, typically > 10°C, to generate continuous two-phase oscillating movements. However, during the transient startup period, this temperature difference could reach as high as 50°C. Large saturation temperature difference, associated with highly turbulent two-phase flow, drives the saturated vapor bubbles from the hot evaporation region to the subcooled environment in less than 100ms. During the rapid condensation, the accelerated shrinking vapor bubbles create interface instability, followed by forming a strong impingement jet to etch the solid pipe wall. The collapse of cavitation is associated with the generation of acoustically tinkling signals that are often heard during most of the operating pulsating heat pipe.


1972 ◽  
Vol 94 (4) ◽  
pp. 403-409 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Huplik ◽  
G. D. Raithby

An experimental investigation of the effect of surface-tension variation around air and vapor bubbles on a downward-facing heated surface is reported. For air bubbles, and vapor bubbles at moderate heat fluxes, regimes of flow where surface-tension forces and buoyancy forces respectively dominate are defined. For boiling at heat fluxes near the burnout limit, flow driven by surface-tension forces appears to play a large role in cooling the heated surface. It is shown that small amounts of surfactant added to the liquid result in dramatic changes in the boiling mechanism, and at high heat fluxes a substantial improvement in the heat transfer. Most of the experiments were conducted with the liquid at temperatures less than the saturation temperature.


Author(s):  
А.В. Кулик ◽  
С.Н. Мокрин ◽  
А.М. Краевский ◽  
С.С. Минаев ◽  
М.А. Гузев ◽  
...  

It was experimentally found that hot submerged jets appeared at laser induced nucleation boiling near the tip optical fiber placed in water exponentially decrease the velocity with the increasing of laser power (heat flux). This result was obtained for closed cylindrical cuvette where hot jets collided with walls slipped the cuvette boundary and transfer the heat. Obtained result is necessary to take into account at precise laser induced surface cleaning inside the closed volumes, for development of medical technologies of laser therapy of pathologically changed vessels, cysts, and for other applications.


Author(s):  
D. Caviezel ◽  
D. Lakehal ◽  
Y. Gong

A detailed numerical analysis of the turbulent convective flow along the heated rods of an idealized PWR sub-channel is investigated. The key predicted quantity is the length at which the rod surface temperature reaches nucleation temperature, approximated here as the saturation temperature. The turbulent effects are modeled using LES with very high grid resolution (∼6 million cells) allowing resolving the viscous-affected layer. In a second step, boiling nucleation is triggered artificially and vapor bubbles are allowed to interact with the turbulent flow. We’ll thoroughly discuss the results, including comparing the turbulence data basis with single-phase flow conditions, and the effect of boiling on the flow.


1981 ◽  
Vol 64 (10) ◽  
pp. 95-103
Author(s):  
Kiyonobu Kusano ◽  
Shigeo Nishida

2012 ◽  
Vol E95.B (8) ◽  
pp. 2638-2641 ◽  
Author(s):  
Makoto YAMADA ◽  
Akisumi TOMOE ◽  
Takahiro KINOSHITA ◽  
Osanori KOYAMA ◽  
Yutaka KATUYAMA ◽  
...  
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