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Flow boiling of R134a and HFE-7000 in a single silicon microchannel with microstructured sidewalls

Flow boiling heat transfer is investigated in a single silicon microchannel with microstructured sidewalls using R134a (at 0.19 reduced pressure) and HFE-7000 (at 0.035 reduced pressure) as working fluids. The channel is 51 mm long with a 400μm x 400μm square cross section. Sidewall microstructures...

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Autores principales: Bortolin, Stefano, Francescon, Andrea, Ribatski, Gherhardt, Del Col, Davide
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2021.121653
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2807911
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author Bortolin, Stefano
Francescon, Andrea
Ribatski, Gherhardt
Del Col, Davide
author_facet Bortolin, Stefano
Francescon, Andrea
Ribatski, Gherhardt
Del Col, Davide
author_sort Bortolin, Stefano
collection CERN
description Flow boiling heat transfer is investigated in a single silicon microchannel with microstructured sidewalls using R134a (at 0.19 reduced pressure) and HFE-7000 (at 0.035 reduced pressure) as working fluids. The channel is 51 mm long with a 400μm x 400μm square cross section. Sidewall microstructures in the form of triangular cavities for the entire height of the channel were introduced during the fabrication process. By including the cavity pattern in the photolithography mask design, high accuracy and reproducibility is ensured during the fabrication of the test sample. A smooth channel with the same geometry but without sidewall microstructures was also fabricated. Flow boiling experimental results are presented for both channel configurations. For R134a at mass velocity $G$ = 800 kg m$^{−2}$ s$^{−1}$, the comparison of the boiling curves shows that: in the channel with the microstructures, the wall superheat at the onset of nucleate boiling (ONB) is reduced from 21 K to 6 K as compared to the smooth channel. An increase of the flow boiling heat transfer coefficient up to 40% is found in the microstructured channel, which must be due to the increased number of active nucleation sites. Heat transfer results, flow visualizations and comparison between R134a and HFE-7000 data provide a clearly evidence of the active role of bubble nucleation during flow boiling in microchannels. These results are of fundamental importance in the design of next generation thermal management systems for electronics
id cern-2807911
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2021
record_format invenio
spelling cern-28079112022-04-29T19:17:00Zdoi:10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2021.121653http://cds.cern.ch/record/2807911engBortolin, StefanoFrancescon, AndreaRibatski, GherhardtDel Col, DavideFlow boiling of R134a and HFE-7000 in a single silicon microchannel with microstructured sidewallsDetectors and Experimental TechniquesFlow boiling heat transfer is investigated in a single silicon microchannel with microstructured sidewalls using R134a (at 0.19 reduced pressure) and HFE-7000 (at 0.035 reduced pressure) as working fluids. The channel is 51 mm long with a 400μm x 400μm square cross section. Sidewall microstructures in the form of triangular cavities for the entire height of the channel were introduced during the fabrication process. By including the cavity pattern in the photolithography mask design, high accuracy and reproducibility is ensured during the fabrication of the test sample. A smooth channel with the same geometry but without sidewall microstructures was also fabricated. Flow boiling experimental results are presented for both channel configurations. For R134a at mass velocity $G$ = 800 kg m$^{−2}$ s$^{−1}$, the comparison of the boiling curves shows that: in the channel with the microstructures, the wall superheat at the onset of nucleate boiling (ONB) is reduced from 21 K to 6 K as compared to the smooth channel. An increase of the flow boiling heat transfer coefficient up to 40% is found in the microstructured channel, which must be due to the increased number of active nucleation sites. Heat transfer results, flow visualizations and comparison between R134a and HFE-7000 data provide a clearly evidence of the active role of bubble nucleation during flow boiling in microchannels. These results are of fundamental importance in the design of next generation thermal management systems for electronicsoai:cds.cern.ch:28079112021
spellingShingle Detectors and Experimental Techniques
Bortolin, Stefano
Francescon, Andrea
Ribatski, Gherhardt
Del Col, Davide
Flow boiling of R134a and HFE-7000 in a single silicon microchannel with microstructured sidewalls
title Flow boiling of R134a and HFE-7000 in a single silicon microchannel with microstructured sidewalls
title_full Flow boiling of R134a and HFE-7000 in a single silicon microchannel with microstructured sidewalls
title_fullStr Flow boiling of R134a and HFE-7000 in a single silicon microchannel with microstructured sidewalls
title_full_unstemmed Flow boiling of R134a and HFE-7000 in a single silicon microchannel with microstructured sidewalls
title_short Flow boiling of R134a and HFE-7000 in a single silicon microchannel with microstructured sidewalls
title_sort flow boiling of r134a and hfe-7000 in a single silicon microchannel with microstructured sidewalls
topic Detectors and Experimental Techniques
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2021.121653
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2807911
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