4.6 Article

Investigation of subcooled flow boiling and CHF using high-resolution diagnostics

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL THERMAL AND FLUID SCIENCE
Volume 99, Issue -, Pages 35-58

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.expthermflusci.2018.07.017

Keywords

Flow boiling; Wall heat flux partitioning; Infrared thermometry

Funding

  1. DOE Consortium for Advanced Simulations of Light Water Reactors (CASL)

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We present an experimental methodology that enables accurate measurement of fundamental subcooled flow boiling quantities, such as nucleation site density, bubble growth and wait time, and bubble departure diameter, up to the Critical Heat Flux (CHF) limit. The methodology is based on high-speed video and high-speed InfraRed (IR) diagnostics, combined with advanced post-processing techniques developed in-house. It also provides hitherto unavailable direct estimates of the individual terms of wall heat flux partitioning in subcooled flow boiling; such information is crucially relevant to the validation of the latest mechanistic flow boiling heat transfer and CHF models. Experiments were performed using deionized (DI) water, on a rectangular cross-section channel (3 x 1 cm(2)), at atmospheric pressure and 10 degrees C of subcooling, for three mass fluxes (500 kg/m(2)/s, 750 kg/m(2)/s, and 1000 kg/m(2)/s). For each set of operating conditions, the average heat flux was escalated from single-phase forced convection up to the occurrence of CHF, and all boiling parameters were recorded at each heat flux. The trends of measured wait time, growth time and bubble departure diameter were successfully captured by mechanistic models developed or co-developed by the authors. Measurements of the wall heat flux partitioning have revealed that the contribution of microlayer evaporation increases monotonically with the increase of the average heat flux, due to the increase of nucleation site density and bubble departure frequency. However, for our specific heater and operating conditions, the contribution of the microlayer evaporation barely exceeds 50% of the total heat flux, right before CHF.

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