Research on the Process of Liquid Droplet Impinging on the Liquid Film

2014 ◽  
Vol 933 ◽  
pp. 295-299
Author(s):  
Z.H. Wang ◽  
X. Meng

The impacting of liquid droplet on the liquid film appears in many engineering processes. In the fusion reactor, liquid metal is used as the heat transfer media, moderator and breeder in the condition of high heat flux. The paper analyzes the flow behavior of liquid droplet impinging on the liquid film from the aspects of experiment research. In the impinging, splashing means the production of secondary drop coming from the cusp of the crown flow or Worthington jet. Impinging velocity, liquid film thickness, droplet diameter, fluid properties and impinging angle have been analyzed separately.

2007 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 96-103 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kendall J. Hollis ◽  
Brian D. Bartram ◽  
Manfred Roedig ◽  
Dennis Youchison ◽  
Richard Nygren

Author(s):  
Elizaveta Gatapova ◽  
Oleg Kabov

The present work focuses upon shear-driven liquid film evaporative cooling of high heat flux local heater. Thin evaporating liquid films may provide very high heat transfer rates and can be used for cooling of high power microelectronic systems. Thermocapillary convection in a liquid film falling down a locally heated substrate has recently been extensively studied. However, non-uniform heating effects remain only partially understood for shear-driven liquid films. The combined effects of evaporation, thermocapillarity and gas dynamics as well as formation of microscopic adsorbed film have not been studied. The effect of evaporation on heat and mass transfer for 2D joint flow of a liquid film and gas is theoretically and numerically investigated. The convective terms in the energy equations are taken into account. The calculations reveal that evaporation from film surface essential influences on heat removal from local heater. It is shown that the thermal boundary layer plays significant role for cooling local heater by evaporating thin liquid film. Measured by an infrared scanner temperature distribution at the film surface is compared with numerical data. Calculations satisfactorily describe the maximal surface temperature value.


Author(s):  
D. V. Zaitsev ◽  
O. A. Kabov

The paper focuses upon shear-driven liquid film evaporative cooling of high-speed computer chips. Thin liquid films may provide very high heat transfer rates, however development of cooling system based on thin film technology requires significant advances in fundamental research. The paper presents new experimental data on flow and breakdown of a liquid film driven by the action of a forced gas flow in a horizontal minichannel (2 mm high), heated from a 22×6.55 mm heater. A map of isothermal flow regimes is plotted and the lengths of smooth region and region of 2D/3D wave occurrence are measured. The scenario of liquid film breakdown under heating is found to differ widely for different flow regimes. It is revealed that the critical heat flux at which film breakdown occurs for a shear-driven liquid film can be several times higher than that for a gravitationally-driven liquid film. This fact makes shear-driven liquid films very promising in high heat flux cooling applications.


2010 ◽  
Vol 63 ◽  
pp. 383-391
Author(s):  
Chang Chun Ge ◽  
Shuang Quan Guo ◽  
Yun Biao Feng ◽  
Zhang Jian Zhou ◽  
Juan Du ◽  
...  

Different coating technologies, such as plasma spray (PS), physical vapor deposition (PVD) and chemical vapor deposition (CVD), which can fabricate the PFM and join it to heat sink materials simultaneously, were applied for the fabrication of plasma facing materials (PFM) in fusion reactor. In the Institute of Nuclear Materials, University of Science and Technology Beijing (USTB), the concept of functionally graded materials (FGM) was adopted to fabricate coatings for effectively alleviating the thermal stress generated between coatings and the substrate materials under high heat flux loading (5~20 MW/m2). In the last several years, functionally graded coatings, including B4C/Cu, W/Cu and Mo/Cu systems were successfully fabricated by atmospheric plasma spray (APS). Characterization of coatings was performed in order to assess microstructure, mechanical properties and high heat flux properties of the FGM coatings. Furthermore, a high thick tungsten coating with 4 mm on copper – chromium - zirconium (Cu, Cr, Zr) alloy substrates was fabricated by APS. The porosity of the coating is less than 2% while mean tensile strength of the coating is about 7 MPa. However, the content of oxygen in the coating is about 6 wt% by energy dispersive spectrum (EDS) analysis, thus further optimization is necessary.


1994 ◽  
Vol 116 (1) ◽  
pp. 167-172 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. L. Lee ◽  
Z. H. Yang ◽  
Y. Hsyua

Cooling requirements in modern industrial applications, such as the removal of heat from electronic equipments, often demand the simultaneous attainment of a high heat flux and a low and relatively uniform and steady temperature of the heated surface to be cooled. The conventional single-phase convection cooling obviously cannot be expected to function adequately, since the heat flux there is directly proportional to the temperature difference between the heated surface and the surrounding medium. To maintain a high heat flux, the temperature of the heated surface usually must be kept at a high level. An attractive alternative is cooling by a spray, which takes advantage of the significant latent heat of evaporation of the liquid. However, in conventional industrial spray coolings, such as in the case of the cooling tower of a power plant, the temperature of the heated surface usually remains relatively high and is nonuniform and unsteady containing numerous flashy hot spots. In order to optimize the performance of the spray cooling of a heated surface by a mist flow, a clear understanding is required of (1) the dynamic interaction between the droplets and the carrier fluid and (2) the thermal reception of the droplets at the heated surface. It is the dynamic interaction between the phases that is causing the droplets to deposit onto the heated surface. The thermal reception at the heated wall develops mass and heat transfer leading to the mode of cooling of the heated surface. In the present study, an experimental investigation was made of the combination of the dynamic depositional behavior of droplets in a water droplet-air mist flow with the use of a specially designed particle-sizing two-dimensional laser-Doppler anemometer. Also, the heat transfer characteristics at the heated surface were investigated in relation to droplet deposition on the heated surface for wide ranges of droplet size, droplet concentration, mist flow velocity, and heat flux. It was discovered that over a certain suitable range of combination of these parameters, a superbly effective cooling scheme could be established by the evaporation on the outside surface of an ultrathin liquid film. Such a film was formed on the heated surface by the continuous deposition of fine droplets from the mist flow. Under these conditions, the heat flux is primarily related to the evaporation of the ultrathin liquid film on the heated surface and thus depends less on the temperature difference between the heated surf ace and the ambient mist flow. The heated surface is quenched to a low, relatively uniform and steady temperature at a very high level of heat flux. Heat transfer enhancement as high as seven times has been found so far. This effective heat transfer scheme is here termed mist cooling.


Author(s):  
R. Panneer Selvam ◽  
Sandya Bhaskara ◽  
Juan C. Balda ◽  
Fred Barlow ◽  
Aicha Elshabini

Spray cooling is a high flux heat removal technique considered for systems dissipating high power within small areas such as advanced lasers. Recently Selvam and Ponnappan (2004 & 2005) identified the importance of modeling heat transfer in a thin liquid film on a hot surface at the micro level and illustrated how this micro level modeling could help to improve the macro level spray cooling. The goal of this research is to advance the theoretical understanding of spray cooling to enable efficient system level hardware designs. Two-phase flow modeling is done using the level set method to identify the interface of vapor and liquid. The modifications made to the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations to consider surface tension and phase change are presented. The equations are solved using the finite difference method. The effect of liquid droplet impact on a 40 μm thick liquid film containing vapor bubble and the consequent heat removal is explained with a sequence of temperature vs. time contours. From that, the importance of fast transient conduction in the liquid film leading to high heat flux in a short time is illustrated. The optimum positioning of the droplet with respect to the vapor bubble for effective heat removal is also systematically investigated. This information is expected to help in proper positioning of the droplet in three-dimensional modeling.


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