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Pool Boiling of Nanofluids on Biphilic Surfaces: An Experimental and Numerical Study

This study addresses the combination of customized surface modification with the use of nanofluids, to infer on its potential to enhance pool-boiling heat transfer. Hydrophilic surfaces patterned with superhydrophobic regions were developed and used as surface interfaces with different nanofluids (w...

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Autores principales: Freitas, Eduardo, Pontes, Pedro, Cautela, Ricardo, Bahadur, Vaibhav, Miranda, João, Ribeiro, Ana P. C., Souza, Reinaldo R., Oliveira, Jeferson D., Copetti, Jacqueline B., Lima, Rui, Pereira, José E., Moreira, António L. N., Moita, Ana S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7826585/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33430503
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano11010125
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author Freitas, Eduardo
Pontes, Pedro
Cautela, Ricardo
Bahadur, Vaibhav
Miranda, João
Ribeiro, Ana P. C.
Souza, Reinaldo R.
Oliveira, Jeferson D.
Copetti, Jacqueline B.
Lima, Rui
Pereira, José E.
Moreira, António L. N.
Moita, Ana S.
author_facet Freitas, Eduardo
Pontes, Pedro
Cautela, Ricardo
Bahadur, Vaibhav
Miranda, João
Ribeiro, Ana P. C.
Souza, Reinaldo R.
Oliveira, Jeferson D.
Copetti, Jacqueline B.
Lima, Rui
Pereira, José E.
Moreira, António L. N.
Moita, Ana S.
author_sort Freitas, Eduardo
collection PubMed
description This study addresses the combination of customized surface modification with the use of nanofluids, to infer on its potential to enhance pool-boiling heat transfer. Hydrophilic surfaces patterned with superhydrophobic regions were developed and used as surface interfaces with different nanofluids (water with gold, silver, aluminum and alumina nanoparticles), in order to evaluate the effect of the nature and concentration of the nanoparticles in bubble dynamics and consequently in heat transfer processes. The main qualitative and quantitative analysis was based on extensive post-processing of synchronized high-speed and thermographic images. To study the nucleation of a single bubble in pool boiling condition, a numerical model was also implemented. The results show an evident benefit of using biphilic patterns with well-established distances between the superhydrophobic regions. This can be observed in the resulting plot of the dissipated heat flux for a biphilic pattern with seven superhydrophobic spots, δ = 1/d and an imposed heat flux of 2132 w/m(2). In this case, the dissipated heat flux is almost constant (except in the instant t* ≈ 0.9 when it reaches a peak of 2400 W/m(2)), whilst when using only a single superhydrophobic spot, where the heat flux dissipation reaches the maximum shortly after the detachment of the bubble, dropping continuously until a new necking phase starts. The biphilic patterns also allow a controlled bubble coalescence, which promotes fluid convection at the hydrophilic spacing between the superhydrophobic regions, which clearly contributes to cool down the surface. This effect is noticeable in the case of employing the Ag 1 wt% nanofluid, with an imposed heat flux of 2132 W/m(2), where the coalescence of the drops promotes a surface cooling, identified by a temperature drop of 0.7 °C in the hydrophilic areas. Those areas have an average temperature of 101.8 °C, whilst the average temperature of the superhydrophobic spots at coalescence time is of 102.9 °C. For low concentrations as the ones used in this work, the effect of the nanofluids was observed to play a minor role. This can be observed on the slight discrepancy of the heat dissipation decay that occurred in the necking stage of the bubbles for nanofluids with the same kind of nanoparticles and different concentration. For the Au 0.1 wt% nanofluid, a heat dissipation decay of 350 W/m(2) was reported, whilst for the Au 0.5 wt% nanofluid, the same decay was only of 280 W/m(2). The results of the numerical model concerning velocity fields indicated a sudden acceleration at the bubble detachment, as can be qualitatively analyzed in the thermographic images obtained in this work. Additionally, the temperature fields of the analyzed region present the same tendency as the experimental results.
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spelling pubmed-78265852021-01-25 Pool Boiling of Nanofluids on Biphilic Surfaces: An Experimental and Numerical Study Freitas, Eduardo Pontes, Pedro Cautela, Ricardo Bahadur, Vaibhav Miranda, João Ribeiro, Ana P. C. Souza, Reinaldo R. Oliveira, Jeferson D. Copetti, Jacqueline B. Lima, Rui Pereira, José E. Moreira, António L. N. Moita, Ana S. Nanomaterials (Basel) Article This study addresses the combination of customized surface modification with the use of nanofluids, to infer on its potential to enhance pool-boiling heat transfer. Hydrophilic surfaces patterned with superhydrophobic regions were developed and used as surface interfaces with different nanofluids (water with gold, silver, aluminum and alumina nanoparticles), in order to evaluate the effect of the nature and concentration of the nanoparticles in bubble dynamics and consequently in heat transfer processes. The main qualitative and quantitative analysis was based on extensive post-processing of synchronized high-speed and thermographic images. To study the nucleation of a single bubble in pool boiling condition, a numerical model was also implemented. The results show an evident benefit of using biphilic patterns with well-established distances between the superhydrophobic regions. This can be observed in the resulting plot of the dissipated heat flux for a biphilic pattern with seven superhydrophobic spots, δ = 1/d and an imposed heat flux of 2132 w/m(2). In this case, the dissipated heat flux is almost constant (except in the instant t* ≈ 0.9 when it reaches a peak of 2400 W/m(2)), whilst when using only a single superhydrophobic spot, where the heat flux dissipation reaches the maximum shortly after the detachment of the bubble, dropping continuously until a new necking phase starts. The biphilic patterns also allow a controlled bubble coalescence, which promotes fluid convection at the hydrophilic spacing between the superhydrophobic regions, which clearly contributes to cool down the surface. This effect is noticeable in the case of employing the Ag 1 wt% nanofluid, with an imposed heat flux of 2132 W/m(2), where the coalescence of the drops promotes a surface cooling, identified by a temperature drop of 0.7 °C in the hydrophilic areas. Those areas have an average temperature of 101.8 °C, whilst the average temperature of the superhydrophobic spots at coalescence time is of 102.9 °C. For low concentrations as the ones used in this work, the effect of the nanofluids was observed to play a minor role. This can be observed on the slight discrepancy of the heat dissipation decay that occurred in the necking stage of the bubbles for nanofluids with the same kind of nanoparticles and different concentration. For the Au 0.1 wt% nanofluid, a heat dissipation decay of 350 W/m(2) was reported, whilst for the Au 0.5 wt% nanofluid, the same decay was only of 280 W/m(2). The results of the numerical model concerning velocity fields indicated a sudden acceleration at the bubble detachment, as can be qualitatively analyzed in the thermographic images obtained in this work. Additionally, the temperature fields of the analyzed region present the same tendency as the experimental results. MDPI 2021-01-07 /pmc/articles/PMC7826585/ /pubmed/33430503 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano11010125 Text en © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Freitas, Eduardo
Pontes, Pedro
Cautela, Ricardo
Bahadur, Vaibhav
Miranda, João
Ribeiro, Ana P. C.
Souza, Reinaldo R.
Oliveira, Jeferson D.
Copetti, Jacqueline B.
Lima, Rui
Pereira, José E.
Moreira, António L. N.
Moita, Ana S.
Pool Boiling of Nanofluids on Biphilic Surfaces: An Experimental and Numerical Study
title Pool Boiling of Nanofluids on Biphilic Surfaces: An Experimental and Numerical Study
title_full Pool Boiling of Nanofluids on Biphilic Surfaces: An Experimental and Numerical Study
title_fullStr Pool Boiling of Nanofluids on Biphilic Surfaces: An Experimental and Numerical Study
title_full_unstemmed Pool Boiling of Nanofluids on Biphilic Surfaces: An Experimental and Numerical Study
title_short Pool Boiling of Nanofluids on Biphilic Surfaces: An Experimental and Numerical Study
title_sort pool boiling of nanofluids on biphilic surfaces: an experimental and numerical study
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7826585/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33430503
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano11010125
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