4.4 Article

Demonstration of heat transfer enhancement using ferromagnetic particle laden fluid and switched magnetic fields

Journal

Publisher

ASME-AMER SOC MECHANICAL ENG
DOI: 10.1115/1.2970064

Keywords

convection; enhancement; magnetic field; particle laden fluid

Funding

  1. Naval Academy Research Council (NARC) [N00014-02-WR20325]
  2. Army Research Office (ARO) [MIPR6MUSNAR137]

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A convective heat transfer enhancement technique and the experimental methods used to quantify the improvement in heat transfer and subsequent differential pressure are introduced. The enhancement technique employed time varying magnetic fields produced in a pipe to cause the ferromagnetic particles of a particle laden fluid (mineral oil and iron filings) to be attracted to and released from a heated pipe wall. The ferromagnetic particles acted not only to advect heat from the pipe wall into the bulk fluid but they also significantly modified the flow field, disrupted the boundary layer, allowed cooler fluid to reach the high temperature pipe wall, increased thermal energy transfer directly to the fluid, and contributed to the overall improvement in heat transfer rate. The experimental method utilized to quantify an increased effectiveness of convective heat transfer used an apparatus designed to replicate an internally cooled fin, whose surface temperature was measured with an IR camera. These temperature measurements were utilized to calculate the convective heat transfer coefficient (h) of the fluid within the pipe. The enhancement technique demonstrated a 267% increase in heat transfer coefficient with only a corresponding 48% increase in flow differential pressure for an electromagnetic switching frequency of 2 Hz. It is also found that there were optimum magnetic field switching frequencies for both enhancement and differential pressure magnitudes.

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