4.5 Article

Experiments and modeling of boiling heat transfer on hybrid-wettability surfaces

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MULTIPHASE FLOW
Volume 144, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijmultiphaseflow.2021.103810

Keywords

Pool boiling; Heat transfer coefficient; Critical heat flux (CHF); Hybrid wettability; Modeling

Categories

Funding

  1. NSAF [U2030112]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51876025]

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This study investigates pool boiling heat transfer on hybrid-wettability surfaces, showing that the nucleate boiling heat transfer coefficient is improved on these surfaces compared to the substrate and plain copper reference. However, the critical heat flux (CHF) behavior is complex on the enhanced surface. The difference in contact angles between the pattern and substrate plays a significant role in the CHF enhancement on the hybrid surface, although it affects the nucleate boiling heat transfer coefficient negatively.
This paper studies pool boiling heat transfer on the hybrid-wettability surfaces, i.e., hydrophobic dot/stripe patterns fabricated on a superhydrophilic substrate. It is shown that the nucleate boiling heat transfer coefficient for the hybrid surface is improved compared to both the substrate and plain copper reference, but the critical heat flux (CHF) on the enhanced surface is very complex. The pattern-to-substrate contact angle difference is also concerned: CHF for the hybrid surface increases remarkably with increasing the contact angle difference, but the nucleate boiling heat transfer coefficient declines. Combining the results for both dot and stripe patterns, it is revealed that CHF on the hybrid surfaces is closely associated with the pattern-to-surface area ratio and the pattern-to-pattern spacing: it declines generally with increasing the area ratio; its dependence on the pattern spacing is minor at large area ratios; however, at small area ratios, the pattern spacing plays an increasingly important role because it dominates both vapor-liquid instabilities and surface rewetting, and the optimal pattern spacing for maximal pool boiling heat transfer enhancement can be estimated using the capillary length. A modified theoretical model is proposed to predicting CHF on both homogenous-and hybrid-wettability surfaces.

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