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contributor authorJun, Seongchul
contributor authorKim, Jinsub
contributor authorKim, Hwan Yeol
contributor authorYou, Seung M.
date accessioned2017-11-25T07:16:42Z
date available2017-11-25T07:16:42Z
date copyright2017/6/1
date issued2017
identifier issn0022-1481
identifier otherht_139_02_020906.pdf
identifier urihttp://138.201.223.254:8080/yetl1/handle/yetl/4234149
description abstractCopper HTCMC (High-temperature, Thermally Conductive Microporous Coating) with a coating thickness of ~300 µm was created by sintering 67 µm copper particles onto a flat copper surface. This was shown to be the optimum particle size and thickness combination, in terms of boiling heat transfer enhancement with water, during a prior pool boiling study conducted by Jun et al. [1]. The effects of orientation of pool boiling heat transfer in saturated distilled water at 1 atm were tested experimentally and compared with a plain copper surface. An SEM image (top left) shows the porous structure of HTCMC demonstrating reentrant cavities which promote nucleate boiling and lead to significant critical heat flux (CHF) enhancement compared to the plain copper surface (top right). The nucleate boiling incipience heat flux of HTCMC was demonstrated to be 5 kW/m2, which was an 8x reduction when compared to a plain copper surface which was found to have an incipience heat flux of 40 kW/m2. At this same 40 kW/m2 heat flux, the activated nucleation site density of HTCMC was extremely high, and each bubble appeared much smaller compared to a plain surface. This can be seen in the first row of images, captured with a high speed camera at 2,000 fps. The bubble growth times and departing bubble sizes of 0° and 90° are comparable for both HTCMC and plain surfaces with the order of 10 milliseconds and 100 micrometers. However, when oriented at 180°, the bubble growth time was the order of 100 milliseconds for both HTCMC and plain surface, and the departing bubble size was the order of 10 millimeters. This is due to the growth of a large bubble which coalesced with adjacent bubbles to become a relatively huge bubble which was stretched by buoyance forces before the bubble departed.
publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
titleOrientation Effects on Pool Boling of Microporous Coating in Water
typeJournal Paper
journal volume139
journal issue2
journal titleJournal of Heat Transfer
identifier doi10.1115/1.4035576
journal fristpage20906
journal lastpage020906-1
treeJournal of Heat Transfer:;2017:;volume( 139 ):;issue: 002
contenttypeFulltext


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