Review of Microscale Heat Transfer

1994 ◽  
Vol 47 (9) ◽  
pp. 397-428 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. B. Duncan ◽  
G. P. Peterson

A review of the literature in the area of microscale heat transfer is presented to provide a concise overview of the recent advances in this field of study. The review is divided into three major sections with each subdivided into subsections. The first section deals with the effects of size reductions in conduction heat transfer, and includes subsections on laser induced heating on the microscale and conduction in thin films. The second section addresses microscale forced convection and includes subsections on micro heat pipes, microscale boiling, and thin liquid films near the contact line. The final section examines the effects of small length scales on radiative heat transfer. The three major sections are followed by a summary that identifies, consolidates, and summarizes the most important advances in each of these three areas.

1995 ◽  
Vol 117 (3) ◽  
pp. 740-747 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Khrustalev ◽  
A. Faghri

A detailed mathematical model is developed that describes heat transfer through thin liquid films in the evaporator of heat pipes with capillary grooves. The model accounts for the effects of interfacial thermal resistance, disjoining pressure, and surface roughness for a given meniscus contact angle. The free surface temperature of the liquid film is determined using the extended Kelvin equation and the expression for interfacial resistance given by the kinetic theory. The numerical results obtained are compared to existing experimental data. The importance of the surface roughness and interfacial thermal resistance in predicting the heat transfer coefficient in the grooved evaporator is demonstrated.


Author(s):  
Hongyi Yu ◽  
Karsten Loffler ◽  
Tatiana Gambaryan-Roisman ◽  
Peter Stephan

Author(s):  
Zezhi Zeng ◽  
Gopinath Warrier ◽  
Y. Sungtaek Ju

Direct-contact heat transfer between a falling liquid film and a gas stream yield high heat transfer rates and as such it is routinely used in several industrial applications. This concept has been incorporated by us into the proposed design of a novel heat exchanger for indirect cooling of steam in power plants. The DILSHE (Direct-contact Liquid-on-String Heat Exchangers) module consists of an array of small diameter (∼ 1 mm) vertical strings with hot liquid coolant flowing down them due to gravity. A low- or near-zero vapor pressure liquid coolant is essential to minimize/eliminate coolant loss. Consequently, liquids such as Ionic Liquids and Silicone oils are ideal candidates for the coolant. The liquid film thickness is of the order of 1 mm. Gas (ambient air) flowing upwards cools the hot liquid coolant. Onset of fluid instabilities (Rayleigh-Plateau and/or Kapitza instabilities) result in the formation of a liquid beads, which enhance heat transfer due to additional mixing. The key to successfully designing and operating DILSHE is understanding the fundamentals of the liquid film fluid dynamics and heat transfer and developing an operational performance map. As a first step towards achieving these goals, we have undertaken a parametric experimental and numerical study to investigate the fluid dynamics of thin liquid films flowing down small diameter strings. Silicone oil and air are the working fluids in the experiments. The experiments were performed with a single nylon sting (fishing line) of diameter = 0.61 mm and height = 1.6 m. The inlet temperature of both liquid and air were constant (∼ 20 °C). In the present set of experiments the variables that were parametrically varied were: (i) liquid mass flow rate (0.05 to 0.23 g/s) and (ii) average air velocity (0 to 2.7 m/s). Visualization of the liquid flow was performed using a high-speed camera. Parameters such as base liquid film thickness, liquid bead shape and size, velocity (and hence frequency) of beads were measured from the high-speed video recordings. The effect of gas velocity on the dynamics of the liquid beads was compared to data available in the open literature. Within the range of gas velocities used in the experiments, the occurrence of liquid hold up and/or liquid blow over, if any, were also identified. Numerical simulations of the two-phase flow are currently being performed. The experimental results will be invaluable in validation/refinement of the numerical simulations and development of the operational map.


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 309
Author(s):  
Maryam Fallah Abbasi ◽  
Hossein Shokouhmand ◽  
Morteza Khayat

Electronic industries have always been trying to improve the efficiency of electronic devices with small dimensions through thermal management of this equipment, thus increasing the use of small thermal sinks. In this study micro heat pipes with triangular and square cross sections have been manufactured and tested. One of the main objectives is to obtain an understanding of micro heat pipes and their role in energy transmission with electrical double layer (EDL). Micro heat pipes are highly efficient heat transfer devices, which use the continuous evaporation/condensation of a suitable working fluid for two-phase heat transport in a closed system. Since the latent heat of vaporization is very large, heat pipes transport heat at small temperature difference, with high rates. Because of variety of advantage features these devices have found a number of applications both in space and terrestrial technologies. The theory of operation micro heat pipes with EDL is described and the micro heat pipe has been studied. The temperature distribution have achieved through five thermocouples installed on the body. Water and different solution mixture of water and ethanol have used to investigate effect of the electric double layer heat transfer. It was noticed that the electric double layer of ionized fluid has caused reduction of heat transfer.


2012 ◽  
Vol 499 ◽  
pp. 21-26 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xi Bing Li ◽  
Z.M. Shi ◽  
S.G. Wang ◽  
Q.M. Hu ◽  
L. Bao ◽  
...  

For great progress in heat pipe technology, a micro heat pipe has become an ideal heat dissipating device in high heat-flux electronic products, and capillary limit is the main factor affecting its heat transfer performance. Based on analyses of capillary limit and currently commonly-used groove structures, this paper built capillary limit models for micro heat pipes with dovetail-groove, rectangular-groove, trapezoidal-groove and V-groove wick structures respectively for theoretical analyses. The analysis results show that better heat transfer performances can be obtained in micro heat pipes with small-angle dovetail (i.e. a sector structure), rectangular and small-angle trapezoidal grooved wick structures when groove depth is 0.2-0.3mm and top-width-to-depth ratio is 1.2-1.5.


Author(s):  
C. B. Sobhan ◽  
G. P. (Bud) Peterson

The fluid flow and heat transfer characteristics of micro heat pipes are analyzed theoretically, in order to understand the physical phenomena and quantify the influence of various parameters on overall thermal performance of these devices. A one-dimensional model is utilized to solve the governing equations for the liquid/vapor flow and the heat transfer in the heat pipe channel. Variations in the liquid and vapor cross-sectional areas along the axial length of the heat pipe are included and the equations are solved using an implicit finite difference scheme. Appropriate models for fluid friction in small passages with varying cross-sectional areas have been incorporated to yield the axial distribution of the meniscus radius of curvature and the velocity, temperature and pressure in both the liquid and the vapor phases. Using this information, the effective thermal conductivity of the micro heat pipe is modeled, and parametric studies are performed by changing the heat load and cooling rate. The results of the analysis are discussed and compared with other theoretical models and experimental results found in the literature. By so doing, this analysis provides greater insight into the physical phenomena of flow and heat transfer in micro heat pipes and identifies a methodology for optimizing the design of these devices.


2007 ◽  
Vol 589 ◽  
pp. 1-31 ◽  
Author(s):  
JIN ZHANG ◽  
STEPHEN J. WATSON ◽  
HARRIS WONG

Micro heat pipes have been used to cool micro electronic devices, but their heat transfer coefficients are low compared with those of conventional heat pipes. In this work, a dual-wet pipe is proposed as a model to study heat transfer in micro heat pipes. The dual-wet pipe has a long and narrow cavity of rectangular cross-section. The bottom-half of the horizontal pipe is made of a wetting material, and the top-half of a non-wetting material. A wetting liquid fills the bottom half of the cavity, while its vapour fills the rest. This configuration ensures that the liquid–vapour interface is pinned at the contact line. As one end of the pipe is heated, the liquid evaporates and increases the vapour pressure. The higher pressure drives the vapour to the cold end where the vapour condenses and releases the latent heat. The condensate moves along the bottom half of the pipe back to the hot end to complete the cycle. We solve the steady-flow problem assuming a small imposed temperature difference between the two ends of the pipe. This leads to skew-symmetric fluid flow and temperature distribution along the pipe so that we only need to focus on the evaporative half of the pipe. Since the pipe is slender, the axial flow gradients are much smaller than the cross-stream gradients. Thus, we can treat the evaporative flow in a cross-sectional plane as two-dimensional. This evaporative motion is governed by two dimensionless parameters: an evaporation number E defined as the ratio of the evaporative heat flux at the interface to the conductive heat flux in the liquid, and a Marangoni number M. The motion is solved in the limit E→∞ and M→∞. It is found that evaporation occurs mainly near the contact line in a small region of size E−1W, where W is the half-width of the pipe. The non-dimensional evaporation rate Q* ~ E−1 ln E as determined by matched asymptotic expansions. We use this result to derive analytical solutions for the temperature distribution Tp and vapour and liquid flows along the pipe. The solutions depend on three dimensionless parameters: the heat-pipe number H, which is the ratio of heat transfer by vapour flow to that by conduction in the pipe wall and liquid, the ratio R of viscous resistance of vapour flow to interfacial evaporation resistance, and the aspect ratio S. If HR≫1, a thermal boundary layer appears near the pipe end, the width of which scales as (HR)−1/2L, where L is the half-length of the pipe. A similar boundary layer exists at the cold end. Outside the boundary layers, Tp varies linearly with a gradual slope. Thus, these regions correspond to the evaporative, adiabatic and condensing regions commonly observed in conventional heat pipes. This is the first time that the distinct regions have been captured by a single solution, without prior assumptions of their existence. If HR ~ 1 or less, then Tp is linear almost everywhere. This is the case found in most micro-heat-pipe experiments. Our analysis of the dual-wet pipe provides an explanation for the comparatively low effective thermal conductivity in micro heat pipes, and points to ways of improving their heat transfer capabilities.


2015 ◽  
Vol 789-790 ◽  
pp. 422-425
Author(s):  
Fun Liang Chang ◽  
Yew Mun Hung

Micro heat pipe is a two-phase heat transfer device offering effective high heat-flux removal in electronics cooling. Essentially, micro heat pipe relies on the phase change processes, namely evaporation and condensation, and the circulation of working fluid to function as heat transfer equipment. The vast applications of micro heat pipe in portable appliances necessitate its functionality under different orientations with respect to gravity. Therefore, its thermal performance is strongly related to its orientation. By incorporating solid wall conduction, together with the continuity, momentum, and energy equations of the working fluid, a mathematical model is developed to investigate the heat and fluid flow characteristics of inclined micro heat pipes. We investigate both the favorable and adverse effects of gravity on the circulation rate which is intimately related to the thermal performance of micro heat pipes. The effects of gravity, through the angle of inclination, on the circulation strength and heat transport capacity are analysed. This study serves as a useful analytical tool in the micro heat pipe design and performance analysis, associated with different inclinations and operating conditions.


1994 ◽  
Vol 116 (4) ◽  
pp. 799-807 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. L. Tien ◽  
G. Chen

This work addresses challenges in the emerging field of microlength scale radiative and conductive heat transfer in solids and recommends specific directions of future research. Microlength scale heat transfer involves thermal energy transport processes in which heat carrier characteristic lengths become comparable to each other or the characteristic device dimension. Identification of these characteristic lengths leads to the definition of different microscale heat transfer regimes. A review of the theoretical bases describing heat transfer in each regime is followed by a discussion of the obstacles confronted in current research. Engineering challenges are illustrated with the applications of microscale heat transfer in cryogenic systems, material processing, and electronic, optical, and optoelectronic devices. The experimental difficulties discussed have hampered the development of microscale heat transfer research and deserve great efforts to overcome them.


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