4.7 Article

Enhanced heat transfer of laser-fabricated copper nanofluid at ultra-low concentration driven by the nanoparticle surface area

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR LIQUIDS
Volume 383, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.molliq.2023.122104

Keywords

Nanofluid; Laser ablation in liquid; PLAL; Thermal conductivity; Viscosity; Green energy

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As an important method for green energy production, the use of nanofluids to enhance the thermophysical properties of solar thermal energy systems is a highly relevant topic. However, the colloidal stability of nanofluids is often impaired during high-temperature processing when nanoparticles are added, which is related to particle size, morphology, and concentration. In this study, we synthesized nanofluids composed of ligand-free colloidal CuNPs dispersed in ethylene glycol through a laser ablation in liquids synthesis method, and observed a nanoparticle surface area-dependent enhancement of thermal conductivity. These findings highlight the suitability of laser-fabricated ligand-free CuNPs as additives for heat transfer fluids in mid-temperature heat transfer applications.
As solar thermal energy systems are an important pillow toward green energy production, the enhancement of their thermophysical properties using nanofluids is a highly relevant topic. However, when nanofluids are designed by the addition of nanoparticles (NPs), their colloidal stability is frequently impaired during hightemperature processing, a phenomenon related to particle size, morphology, and concentration. In this work, we synthesized nanofluids composed of ligand-free colloidal CuNPs dispersed in ethylene glycol by continuousflow, picosecond-pulsed laser ablation in liquids synthesis, yielding monomodal-CuNPs with mean diameters of 2.5 and 4.8 nm. The nanofluids' thermal conductivity (knf) was measured using a guarded-hot-plate method in the temperature range from 298 to 318 K. We observed a nanoparticle surface area-dependent enhancement of the knf up to 30 % at ultra-low volume concentration of 20 ppm. This corresponds to 30 times higher concentration-normalized knf in comparison to the state-of-the-art, while the resulting nanofluids retain their rheological properties. The findings are matched with Yu-Choi's theoretical model calculations, indicating that heat transfer at the nanoparticle-solvent interface is driven by an interfacial layer of solvent molecules. These findings highlight the suitability of laser-fabricated ligand-free CuNPs as additives for heat transfer fluids, maximizing performance in mid-temperature heat transfer applications like solar thermal collectors.

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