Analysis of heat transfer under high heat flux nucleate boiling conditions

Kerntechnik ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 81 (3) ◽  
pp. 308-314 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Liu ◽  
N. Dinh
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ji Hwan Lim ◽  
Minkyu Park

Abstract The onset of nucleate boiling (ONB) is the point at which the heat transfer mechanism in fluids changes and is one of the thermo-hydraulic factors that must be considered when establishing a cooling system operation strategy. Because the high heat flux of several MW/m2, which is loaded within a tokamak, is applied under a one-side heating condition, it is necessary to determine a correlative relation that can predict ONB under special heating conditions. In this study, the ONB of a one-side-heated screw tube was experimentally analyzed via a subcooled flow boiling experiment. The helical nut structure of the screw tube flow path wall allows for improved heat transfer performance relative to smooth tubes, providing a screw tube with a 53.98% higher ONB than a smooth tube. The effects of the system parameters on the ONB heat flux were analyzed based on the changes in the heat transfer mechanism, with the results indicating that the flow rate and degree of subcooling are proportional to the ONB heat flux because increasing these factors improves the forced convection heat transfer and increases the condensation rate, respectively. However, it was observed that the liquid surface tension and latent heat decrease as the pressure increases, leading to a decrease in the ONB heat flux. An evaluation of the predictive performance of existing ONB correlations revealed that most have high error rates because they were developed based on ONB experiments on micro-channels or smooth tubes and not under one-side high heat load conditions. To address this, we used dimensional analysis based on Python code to develop new ONB correlations that reflect the influence of system parameters.


Author(s):  
Hailei Wang ◽  
Richard Peterson

Flow boiling and heat transfer enhancement in four parallel microchannels using a dielectric working fluid, HFE 7000, was investigated. Each channel was 1000 μm wide and 510 μm high. A unique channel surface enhancement technique via diffusion bonding a layer of conductive fine wire mesh onto the heating wall was developed. According to the obtained flow boiling curves for both the bare and mesh channels, the amount of wall superheat was significantly reduced for the mesh channel at all stream-wise locations. This indicated that the nucleate boiling in the mesh channel was enhanced due to the increase of nucleation sites the mesh introduced. Both the nucleate boiling dominated and convective evaporation dominated regimes were identified. In addition, the overall trend for the flow boiling heat transfer coefficient, with respect to vapor quality, was increasing until the vapor quality reached approximately 0.4. The critical heat flux (CHF) for the mesh channel was also significantly higher than that of the bare channel in the low vapor quality region. Due to the fact of how the mesh was incorporated into the channels, no pressure drop penalty was identified for the mesh channels. Potential applications for this kind of mesh channel include high heat-flux electronic cooling systems and various energy conversion systems.


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.


Author(s):  
Qingjun Cai ◽  
Avijit Bhunia ◽  
Yuan Zhao

Silicon is the major material in IC manufacture. It has high thermal conductivity and is compatible with precision micro-fabrication. It also has decent thermal expansion coefficient to most semiconductor materials. These characteristics make it an ideally underlying material for fabricating micro/mini heat pipes and their wick structures. In this paper, we focus our research investigations on high heat flux phase change capacity of the silicon wick structures. The experimental wick sample is composed of silicon pillars 320μm in height and 30 ∼ 100μm in diameter. In a stainless steel test chamber, synchronized visualizations and measurements are performed to crosscheck experimental phenomena and data. Using the mono-wick structure with large silicon pillar of 100μm in diameter, the phase change on the silicon wick structure reaches its maximum heat flux at 1,130W/cm2 over a 2mm×2mm heating area. The wick structure can fully utilize the wick pump capability to supply liquid from all 360° directions to the center heating area. In contrast, the large heating area and fine silicon pillars 10μm in diameter significantly reduces liquid transport capability and suppresses generation of nucleate boiling. As a result, phase change completely relies on evaporation, and the CHF of the wick structure is reduced to 180W/cm2. An analytical model based on high heat flux phase change of mono-porous wick structures indicates that heat transfer capability is subjected to the ratio between the wick particle radius and the heater dimensions, as well as vapor occupation ratio of the porous volume. In contrast, phase change heat transfer coefficients of the wick structures essentially reflect material properties of wick structure and mechanism of two-phase interactions within wick structures.


2013 ◽  
Vol 135 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Satish G. Kandlikar ◽  
Theodore Widger ◽  
Ankit Kalani ◽  
Valentina Mejia

Flow boiling in microchannels has been extensively studied in the past decade. Instabilities, low critical heat flux (CHF) values, and low heat transfer coefficients have been identified as the major shortcomings preventing its implementation in practical high heat flux removal systems. A novel open microchannel design with uniform and tapered manifolds (OMM) is presented to provide stable and highly enhanced heat transfer performance. The effects of the gap height and flow rate on the heat transfer performance have been experimentally studied with water. The critical heat fluxes (CHFs) and heat transfer coefficients obtained with the OMM are significantly higher than the values reported by previous researchers for flow boiling with water in microchannels. A record heat flux of 506 W/cm2 with a wall superheat of 26.2 °C was obtained for a gap size of 0.127 mm. The CHF was not reached due to heater power limitation in the current design. A maximum effective heat transfer coefficient of 290,000 W/m2 °C was obtained at an intermediate heat flux of 319 W/cm2 with a gap of 0.254 mm at 225 mL/min. The flow boiling heat transfer was found to be insensitive to flow rates between 40–333 mL/min and gap sizes between 0.127–1.016 mm, indicating the dominance of nucleate boiling. The OMM geometry is promising to provide exceptional performance that is particularly attractive in meeting the challenges of high heat flux removal in electronics cooling applications.


Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (11) ◽  
pp. 2970
Author(s):  
Donghui Zhang ◽  
Haiyang Xu ◽  
Yi Chen ◽  
Leiqing Wang ◽  
Jian Qu ◽  
...  

Flow boiling in microporous layers has attracted a great deal of attention in the enhanced heat transfer field due to its high heat dissipation potential. In this study, flow boiling experiments were performed on both porous microchannels and a copper-based microchannel, using water as the coolant. As the heat flux was less than 80 W/cm2, the porous microchannels presented significantly higher boiling heat transfer coefficients than the copper-based microchannel. This was closely associated with the promotion of the nucleation site density of the porous coating. With the further increase in heat flux, the heat transfer coefficients of the porous microchannels were close to those of the copper-based sample. The boiling process in the porous microchannel was found to be dominated by the nucleate boiling mechanism from low to moderate heat flux (<80 W/cm2).This switched to the convection boiling mode at high heat flux. The porous samples were able to mitigate flow instability greatly. A visual observation revealed that porous microchannels could suppress the flow fluctuation due to the establishment of a stable nucleate boiling process. Porous microchannels showed no advantage over the copper-based sample in the critical heat flux. The optimal thickness-to-particle-size ratio (δ/d) for the porous microchannel was confirmed to be between 2–5. In this range, the maximum enhanced effect on boiling heat transfer could be achieved.


Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (13) ◽  
pp. 3893
Author(s):  
Mohd Danish ◽  
Mohammed K. Al Mesfer ◽  
Khursheed B. Ansari ◽  
Mudassir Hasan ◽  
Abdelfattah Amari ◽  
...  

In the current work, the heat flux in nucleate pool boiling has been predicted using the macrolayer and latent heat evaporation model. The wall superheat (ΔT) and macrolayer thickness (δ) are the parameters considered for predicting the heat flux. The influence of operating parameters on instantaneous conduction heat flux and average heat flux across the macrolayer are investigated. A comparison of the findings of current model with Bhat’s decreasing macrolayer model revealed a close agreement under the nucleate pool boiling condition at high heat flux. It is suggested that conduction heat transfer strongly rely on macrolayer thickness and wall superheat. The wall superheat and macrolayer thickness is found to significantly contribute to conduction heat transfer. The predicted results closely agree with the findings of Bhat’s decreasing macrolayer model for higher values of wall superheat signifying the nucleate boiling. The predicted results of the proposed model and Bhat’s existing model are validated by the experimental data. The findings also endorse the claim that predominant mode of heat transfer from heater surface to boiling liquid is the conduction across the macrolayer at the significantly high heat flux region of nucleate boiling.


2019 ◽  
Vol 196 ◽  
pp. 00062
Author(s):  
Vladimir Kuznetsov ◽  
Alisher Shamirzaev ◽  
Alexander Mordovskoy

This paper presents the results of an experimental study of the heat transfer during flow boiling of refrigerant R236fa in a horizontal microchannel heat sink. The experiments were performed using closed loop that re-circulates coolant. Microchannel heat exchanger that contains two microchannels with 2x0.4 mm cross-section was used as the test section. The dependence of average heat flux on wall superheat and critical heat flux were measured in the range of mass fluxes from 600 to 1600 kg/m2s and in the range of heat fluxes from 5 to 120 W/cm2. For heat flux greater than 60 W/cm2, nucleate boiling suppression has significant effect on the flow boiling heat transfer, and this leads to decrease of the heat transfer coefficient with heat flux grows.


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