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  4. A novel time strip flow visualisation technique for investigation of intermittent dewetting and dryout in elongated bubble flow in a microchannel evaporator
 
research article

A novel time strip flow visualisation technique for investigation of intermittent dewetting and dryout in elongated bubble flow in a microchannel evaporator

Borhani, Navid
•
Agostini, Bruno  
•
Thome, John Richard  
2010
International Journal Of Heat And Mass Transfer

A flow visualisation study of flow boiling of R245fa in silicon multi-microchannels at low mass flux and moderate heat flux has been carried out with a high speed digital camera. The micro-evaporator had 67 channels of length 20 mm, width 223 mu m, and height 680 mu m while the fin width between adjacent channels was 80 mu m. The base heat flux ranged from 2 to 26W cm(-2) for a mass velocity of 100 kg s(-1) m(-2), resulting in exit vapour qualities ranging from 10% to 70%. In particular, a novel time strip technique was developed to analyse the recorded image sequences and significantly highlight the various phenomena occurring along given channels. Notably, this technique was able to reveal profound details regarding the intermittent dryout mechanism of liquid films trapped between the elongated bubbles and the heated channel walls. The results show that the intermittent dryout of the evaporating liquid film is comprised of four stages with distinct time scales and dynamics: (i) the growth of liquid film thinning perturbations to a critical amplitude causing the rupture of the metastable liquid film, (ii) a dewetting stage involving expanding dry spots leading to a rivulet flow regime, (iii) evaporation of the rivulets leading to full dryout, and (iv) a rewetting stage. This intermittent dryout mechanism appears to explain the many seemingly contradictory heat transfer coefficient trends observed with changes in vapour quality in microchannels, thus resolving an important heat transfer dilemma. Furthermore, since dryout is an undesirable event during the practical application of a microchannel evaporator, it is important to delay or even suppress the initial rupture of the liquid film that leads to dryout. This can be achieved by manufacturing or treating the channel surfaces to be highly wettable with the chosen refrigerant. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2010.06.011
Web of Science ID

WOS:000281383700038

Author(s)
Borhani, Navid
Agostini, Bruno  
Thome, John Richard  
Date Issued

2010

Published in
International Journal Of Heat And Mass Transfer
Volume

53

Start page

4809

End page

4818

Subjects

Microchannel evaporator

•

Dryout

•

Flow visualisation

•

Critical Heat-Flux

•

Silicon Multi-Microchannels

•

Liquid-Films

•

Part I

•

Nucleation

•

Patterns

•

Model

•

Holes

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LTCM  
Available on Infoscience
December 16, 2011
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/75228
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