4.3 Article Proceedings Paper

Influence of interface wettability on normal and explosive boiling of ultra-thin liquid films on a heated substrate in nanoscale: a molecular dynamics study

Journal

MICRO & NANO LETTERS
Volume 12, Issue 11, Pages 843-848

Publisher

INST ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY-IET
DOI: 10.1049/mnl.2017.0425

Keywords

argon; aluminium; molecular dynamics method; wetting; liquid films; boiling; adsorbed layers; interface wettability; molecular dynamics method; explosive boiling; ultrathin liquid argon film; heated solid aluminium surface; three-phase molecular system; vapour argon; solid-liquid interfacial wettability; lyophilic surfaces; lyophobic surfaces; neutral surfaces; temperature 150 K; temperature 350 K; Al; Ar

Funding

  1. National Natural Foundation of China [51205302, 50903017]
  2. Natural Science Basic Research Plan in Shaanxi Province of China [2017JM5003, 2016ZDJC-09]

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Wettability, as one of the important properties of solid surface, may influence heat and mass transfer in boiling process. Molecular dynamics method is employed to investigate the effects of wettability on normal and explosive boiling of ultra-thin liquid argon film absorbed on a heated solid aluminium surface in a confined space in present work. The initial three-phase molecular system is comprised of solid aluminium wall, liquid argon and vapour argon and is run for three different solid-liquid interfacial wettability (lyophilic, lyophobic and neutral surfaces), which achieves a balance at 90 K. After equilibrium period, two different jump temperatures degree, 150 and 350 K, are set on heat source layers separately to characterise the boiling phenomena, namely, low-temperature degree for normal boiling and high-temperature degree for explosive boiling in which temperature of solid wall is far beyond the critical temperature of liquid argon. The simulation results indicate that the wetting condition of solid-liquid interfacial surface have significant effects on both cases of boiling phenomena. Furthermore, the heat transfer rate with good wettability (lyophilic) is much higher than bad wettability (lyophobic) with same jump temperature degree.

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