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  4. Mechanisms Of Boiling In Microchannels: Critical Assessment
 
conference paper

Mechanisms Of Boiling In Microchannels: Critical Assessment

Thome, J. R.  
•
Consolini, L.  
2010
Microfluidics Based Microsystems: Fundamentals And Applications
Conference of the NATO-Advanced-Study-Institute on Microfluidics Based Microsystems - Fundamentals and Applications

Numerous characteristic trends and effects have been observed in published studies on two-phase micro-channel boiling heat transfer. While macro-scale flow boiling heat transfer may be decomposed into nucleate and convective boiling contributions, at the micro-scale the extent of these two important mechanisms remains unclear. Although many experimental studies have proposed nucleate boiling as the dominant micro-scale mechanism, based on the strong dependence of the heat transfer coefficient on the heat flux similar to nucleate pool boiling, they fall short when it comes to actual physical proof. A strong presence of nucleate boiling is reasonably associated to a flow of bubbles with sizes ranging from the microscopic scale to the magnitude of the channel diameter. The bubbly flow pattern, which well adapts to this description, is observed however only over an extremely limited range of low vapor qualities (typically for x < 0.01-0.05). Furthermore, at intermediate and high vapor qualities, when the flow assumes the annular configuration and a convective behavior is expected to dominate the heat transfer process, the experimental evidence yields entirely counter intuitive results, with heat transfer coefficients often decreasing with increasing vapor quality rather than increasing as in macro-scale channels, and with a much diminished heat flux dependency as would be expected. In summary, convective boiling in micro-channels has revealed to be much more complex than originally thought. The present review aims at describing and analyzing the boiling mechanisms that have been proposed for two-phase microchannel flows, confronting them with the available experimental heat transfer results, while highlighting those questions that, to date, remain unanswered.

  • Details
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Type
conference paper
DOI
10.1007/978-90-481-9029-4_5
Web of Science ID

WOS:000289175700005

Author(s)
Thome, J. R.  
Consolini, L.  
Date Issued

2010

Publisher

Springer, 101 Philip Drive, Norwell, Ma 02061 Usa

Published in
Microfluidics Based Microsystems: Fundamentals And Applications
ISBN of the book

978-90-481-9028-7

Series title/Series vol.

NATO Science for Peace and Security Series A-Chemistry and Biology

Start page

83

End page

105

Subjects

Small-Diameter Tubes

•

Heat-Transfer Model

•

2-Phase Flow

•

Part I

•

Evaporation

•

Channels

•

Bubbles

•

R-134A

•

Flux

Editorial or Peer reviewed

NON-REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LTCM  
Event nameEvent placeEvent date
Conference of the NATO-Advanced-Study-Institute on Microfluidics Based Microsystems - Fundamentals and Applications

Cesme Izmir, TURKEY

Aug 23-Sep 04, 2009

Available on Infoscience
December 16, 2011
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/74713
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