3.8 Article

The effect of dissolving gases or solids in water droplets boiling on a hot surface

Journal

JOURNAL OF HEAT TRANSFER-TRANSACTIONS OF THE ASME
Volume 123, Issue 4, Pages 719-728

Publisher

ASME-AMER SOC MECHANICAL ENG
DOI: 10.1115/1.1376394

Keywords

additives; boiling; droplet; enhancement; heat transfer; sprays

Ask authors/readers for more resources

We conducted experiments on the effect of dissolving either a gas (carbon dioxide) or a solid salt (sodium carbonate or sodium bicarbonate) in water droplets boiling on a hot stainless steel surface. Substrate temperatures were varied from 100 degreesC to 300 degreesC. We recorded the boiling of droplets with a video system, and photographed droplet impact using short-duration flash photography. At surface temperatures that were too low to initiate nucleate boiling, dissolved salts were found to reduce the evaporation rate since the), lower the vapor pressure of water. Dissolved gas had the opposite effect: it came out of solution and formed babbles in the liquid, enhancing evaporation. In the nucleate boiling regime dissolved carbon dioxide enhanced hear transfer by a small amount. However, sodium carbonate prevented coalescence of vapor bubbles and produced foaming in the droplet, greatly enhancing heat transfer and reducing the droplet lifetime to approximately half that of, a pure water drop. Sodium bicarbonate, which decomposes to give Carbon dioxide and sodium carbonate when heated, produced an even larger enhancement of heat transfer. When the surface temperature was raised above the Leidenfrost temperature of water, droplets went into film boiling and bounced off the surface following impact. Dissolved carbon dioxide was found to suppress heterogeneous bubble formation in the droplet during impact. However, dissolved salts promoted bubble formation and led to droplet break-up during impact.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

3.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available