Study of heat transfer enhancement for structured surfaces in spray cooling.

Author(s) : XIE J. L., TAN Y. B., DUAN F., et al.

Type of article: Article

Summary

Experiments were conducted to study the heat transfer effects of enhanced surfaces in spray cooling. The enhanced surfaces including micro-, macro- and multiscale-structured shapes along with a referenced smooth flat at surface were tested in a closed loop system with R134a as the working fluid. The experimental results indicate that fin arrangements rather than a simple increase in wetted area plays a decisive role in the cooling performance of macro-structured surfaces. The micro-structured flat surface was suggested to enhance nucleate boiling by providing more potential nucleation sites and capillary effects. Despite having the same surface geometries, multiscale-structured surfaces with planted micro-structures outperformed macro-structured surfaces in terms of heat transfer enhancement. Using the smooth flat surface as a baseline, the micro-structured flat surface produced a relative heat transfer enhancement of 32% compared to the 36% of the macro-structured surfaces, while the multiscale-structured surfaces achieved a heat transfer enhancement of up to 65%. In addition to improving heat transfer performance, macro-structured surfaces provide other advantages such as prolonging the transition process and reducing the period of time during which the heater surface remains in the extremely high temperature regime (film boiling) after power is switched off.

Details

  • Original title: Study of heat transfer enhancement for structured surfaces in spray cooling.
  • Record ID : 30009145
  • Languages: English
  • Source: Applied Thermal Engineering - vol. 59 - n. 1-2
  • Publication date: 2013/09
  • DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.applthermaleng.2013.05.047

Links


See other articles in this issue (25)
See the source