Publication | Closed Access
Effect of nanoparticles on critical heat flux of water in pool boiling heat transfer
939
Citations
8
References
2003
Year
EngineeringLiquid Metal CoolingNanofluidsChemistryChemical EngineeringHeat Transfer ProcessNanoengineeringThermodynamicsMaterials ScienceCritical Heat FluxNanotechnologyNanomanufacturingThermal TransportNanofluidicsHeat TransferNano ApplicationFlat Square HeaterNanomaterialsHeat Transfer EnhancementPool BoilingBoiling SurfaceThermal EngineeringThermophysical PropertyBoiling
The study aims to enhance critical heat flux in pool boiling by using a nanofluid composed of water and a very small amount of nanosized particles. The authors measured pool‑boiling curves of pure water and alumina‑nanofluid (0–0.05 g l⁻¹) on 1 × 1 cm² polished copper at 2.89 psia (60 °C). The nanofluid increased CHF by about 200 % relative to pure water, while nucleate‑boiling heat‑transfer coefficients remained essentially unchanged.
The present study is to enhance the critical heat flux (CHF) in pool boiling from a flat square heater immersed in nanofluid (water mixed with extremely small amount of nanosized particles). The test results show that the enhancement of CHF was drastic when nanofluid is used as a cooling liquid instead of pure water. The experiment was performed to measure and compare pool boiling curves of pure water and nanofluid at the pressure of 2.89 psia (Tsat=60 °C) using 1×1 cm2 polished copper surfaces as a boiling surface. The tested nanofluid contains alumina (Al2O3) nanoparticles dispersed in distilled and deionized water. Tested concentrations of nanoparticles range from 0 g/l to 0.05 g/l. The measured pool boiling curves of nanofluids saturated at 60 °C have demonstrated that the CHF increases dramatically (∼200% increase) compared to pure water case; however, the nucleate boiling heat transfer coefficients appear to be about the same.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1