Steady-State Segmented Thermofluid Network Simulations of a Loop Heat Pipe Operating With Four Different Working Fluids

Author(s):  
Nirmalakanth Jesuthasan ◽  
B. Rabi Baliga

A segmented network thermofluid model for the simulation of a loop heat pipe (LHP) operating under steady-state conditions is presented, with special emphasis on quasi one-dimensional models and semi-empirical correlations for the related multiphase phenomena. Attention is focused on an LHP with one flat-evaporator, a vapor transport line, one condenser, a liquid transport line, and a compensation chamber. The evaporator consists of the following parts: An upper piece, machined out of a stainless steel plate, with vapor-transport grooves of rectangular cross section on its bottom face; a lower piece, also machined out of a stainless steel plate, with a cavity of rectangular cross section that serves as the liquid pool in the evaporator during the operation of the LHP; and a rectangular wick sandwiched between the upper and lower pieces. The wick is a sintered powder metal plate made of stainless steel. The condenser is a horizontal tube that is fitted with excellent thermal contact inside a large high thermal conductivity metallic sleeve that is maintained at a fixed sink temperature. The vapor-transport line, the condenser, and the liquid-transport line are divided into control volumes or cells. Quasi one-dimensional models are used to impose balances of mass, momentum, and energy on each of these cells. The variation of fluid thermophysical properties and multiphase phenomena, such as the change in quality and pressure drops in the two-phase regions, are suitably accounted for in this model. Four different working fluids, ammonia, distilled water, ethanol and isopropanol, are considered, and the results obtained for a representative range of steady-state operating conditions of the LHP are presented and comparatively discussed.

Author(s):  
Nima Atabaki ◽  
Nirmalakanth Jesuthasan ◽  
B. Rabi Baliga

A loop heat pipe (LHP) with one evaporator, a vapor-transport line, a single condenser, a liquid-transport line, and a compensation chamber is considered. The evaporator is an internally grooved circular pipe, with an annular wick installed on its inner surface. The wick is made of sintered powder metal. The condenser is a horizontal tube that is fitted with excellent thermal contact inside a metallic sleeve that is immersed in a constant-temperature bath maintained at a fixed sink temperature. Two different network thermofluid models of this LHP operating under steady-state conditions are presented. In the first (basic) model, quasi one-dimensional mathematical models of the fluid flow and heat transfer in each of the elements of the LHP are used; the pressure drop in the two-phase region of the condenser is ignored; and a relatively simple correlation is used to model the heat transfer in the two-phase region of the condenser. In the second (segmented) model, quasi one-dimensional control volumes or cells are used for the simulation of fluid flow and heat transfer in the vapor-transport line, the condenser, and the liquid-transport line, in order to better account for the variation of fluid properties and the quality (in two-phase regions); and the pressure drops in the two-phase regions are accounted for. The working fluid considered in this investigation is ammonia, but the proposed models can be used with any suitable fluid. Results pertaining to the LHP performance for a range of operating conditions are presented. Some of these results are compared to corresponding results of an earlier experimental investigation in the literature: good agreement is obtained with both models.


2019 ◽  
Vol 153 ◽  
pp. 588-602 ◽  
Author(s):  
H.X. Yuan ◽  
X.W. Chen ◽  
M. Theofanous ◽  
Y.W. Wu ◽  
T.Y. Cao ◽  
...  

1998 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 81-86
Author(s):  
Nobuhiro Isobe ◽  
Shigeo Sakurai ◽  
Kazumichi Imou ◽  
Morio Yorikawa ◽  
Yukio Takahashi

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