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Analysis of surface wettability effect on nucleate boiling with a diffuse interface method

ORAL

Abstract

Multi-phase systems with phase-change phenomena, in particular boiling, are common in many industrial applications, including power generation plants and thermal management of high-power and high-dissipation-rate micro-devices which would burn out if not cooled properly.

Due to the non-equilibrium thermodynamics and the complexity of coupling the heat and mass transfer in phase-change and surface processes, these systems are difficult to describe accurately. Although experiments have been conducted to study boiling, its mechanisms and heat transfer characteristics are still not understood completely.

We simulate pool boiling using the diffuse interface method (DIM) embedded in our home-grown “TPLS” solver. This method allows the imposition of a boundary condition to prescribe wettability removing the stress singularity at the three-phase contact line, thus enabling us to analyse the role of surface features on heat transfer coefficient, bubble growth and bubble departures. Our framework also allows simulation of populations of bubbles and analyse bubble interactions at varied bubble sizes for different wettabilities as a function of superheat. We compare our simulations with our nucleate boiling experiments using FC72 on silicon surfaces.

Our simulations show the importance of surface tension on departure conditions, suggesting a higher heat transfer coefficient in hydrophilic cases. Conversely, we have found limited bubble growth rate on hydrophobic surfaces. In hydrophobic cases, the larger amount of residual vapour left on the heater surface after bubble departure limits the coolability of the substrate but it might promote the growth of forming bubbles subsequently.

Presenters

  • Giada Minozzi

    University of Edinburgh

Authors

  • Giada Minozzi

    University of Edinburgh

  • Alessio D Lavino

    Imperial College London

  • Edward R Smith

    Brunel University, Brunel University, UK, Brunel University London

  • Jionghui Liu

    University of Edinburgh

  • Tassos Karayiannis

    Brunel University

  • Khellil Sefiane

    Univ of Edinburgh, University of Edinburgh, The University of Edinburgh

  • Omar K Matar

    Imperial College London

  • David Scott

    EPCC University of Edinburgh, EPCC, University of Edinburgh

  • Timm Krueger

    University of Edinburgh

  • Prashant Valluri

    School of Engineering, Univ of Edinburgh, School of Engineering, University of Edinburgh