Evaporation of nanofluid droplet on heated surface

In this study, an experiment on the evaporation of nanofluid sessile droplet on a heated surface was conducted. A nanofluid of 0.5% volumetric concentration mixed with 80-nm-sized CuO powder and pure water were used for experiment. Droplet was applied to the heated surface, and images of the evapora...

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Main Author: Yeung Chan Kim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2015-04-01
Series:Advances in Mechanical Engineering
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/1687814015578358
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spelling doaj-86426cd8f46344a39bbba5dbbbb8c3e32020-11-25T03:20:34ZengSAGE PublishingAdvances in Mechanical Engineering1687-81402015-04-01710.1177/168781401557835810.1177_1687814015578358Evaporation of nanofluid droplet on heated surfaceYeung Chan KimIn this study, an experiment on the evaporation of nanofluid sessile droplet on a heated surface was conducted. A nanofluid of 0.5% volumetric concentration mixed with 80-nm-sized CuO powder and pure water were used for experiment. Droplet was applied to the heated surface, and images of the evaporation process were obtained. The recorded images were analyzed to find the volume, diameter, and contact angle of the droplet. In addition, the evaporative heat transfer coefficient was calculated from experimental result. The results of this study are summarized as follows: the base diameter of the droplet was maintained stably during the evaporation. The measured temperature of the droplet was increased rapidly for a very short time, then maintained constantly. The nanofluid droplet was evaporated faster than the pure water droplet under the experimental conditions of the same initial volume and temperature, and the average evaporative heat transfer coefficient of the nanofluid droplet was higher than that of pure water. We can consider the effects of the initial contact angle and thermal conductivity of nanofluid as the reason for this experimental result. However, the effect of surface roughness on the evaporative heat transfer of nanofluid droplet appeared unclear.https://doi.org/10.1177/1687814015578358
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yeung Chan Kim
spellingShingle Yeung Chan Kim
Evaporation of nanofluid droplet on heated surface
Advances in Mechanical Engineering
author_facet Yeung Chan Kim
author_sort Yeung Chan Kim
title Evaporation of nanofluid droplet on heated surface
title_short Evaporation of nanofluid droplet on heated surface
title_full Evaporation of nanofluid droplet on heated surface
title_fullStr Evaporation of nanofluid droplet on heated surface
title_full_unstemmed Evaporation of nanofluid droplet on heated surface
title_sort evaporation of nanofluid droplet on heated surface
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Advances in Mechanical Engineering
issn 1687-8140
publishDate 2015-04-01
description In this study, an experiment on the evaporation of nanofluid sessile droplet on a heated surface was conducted. A nanofluid of 0.5% volumetric concentration mixed with 80-nm-sized CuO powder and pure water were used for experiment. Droplet was applied to the heated surface, and images of the evaporation process were obtained. The recorded images were analyzed to find the volume, diameter, and contact angle of the droplet. In addition, the evaporative heat transfer coefficient was calculated from experimental result. The results of this study are summarized as follows: the base diameter of the droplet was maintained stably during the evaporation. The measured temperature of the droplet was increased rapidly for a very short time, then maintained constantly. The nanofluid droplet was evaporated faster than the pure water droplet under the experimental conditions of the same initial volume and temperature, and the average evaporative heat transfer coefficient of the nanofluid droplet was higher than that of pure water. We can consider the effects of the initial contact angle and thermal conductivity of nanofluid as the reason for this experimental result. However, the effect of surface roughness on the evaporative heat transfer of nanofluid droplet appeared unclear.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/1687814015578358
work_keys_str_mv AT yeungchankim evaporationofnanofluiddropletonheatedsurface
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