| Literature DB >> 21711719 |
Michael Saterlie1, Huseyin Sahin, Barkan Kavlicoglu, Yanming Liu, Olivia Graeve.
Abstract
We present an analysis of the dispersion characteristics and thermal conductivity performance of copper-based nanofluids. The copper nanoparticles were prepared using a chemical reduction methodology in the presence of a stabilizing surfactant, oleic acid or cetyl trimethylammonium bromide (CTAB). Nanofluids were prepared using water as the base fluid with copper nanoparticle concentrations of 0.55 and 1.0 vol.%. A dispersing agent, sodium dodecylbenzene sulfonate (SDBS), and subsequent ultrasonication was used to ensure homogenous dispersion of the copper nanopowders in water. Particle size distribution of the copper nanoparticles in the base fluid was determined by dynamic light scattering. We found that the 0.55 vol.% Cu nanofluids exhibited excellent dispersion in the presence of SDBS. In addition, a dynamic thermal conductivity setup was developed and used to measure the thermal conductivity performance of the nanofluids. The 0.55 vol.% Cu nanofluids exhibited a thermal conductivity enhancement of approximately 22%. In the case of the nanofluids prepared from the powders synthesized in the presence of CTAB, the enhancement was approximately 48% over the base fluid for the 1.0 vol.% Cu nanofluids, which is higher than the enhancement values found in the literature. These results can be directly related to the particle/agglomerate size of the copper nanoparticles in water, as determined from dynamic light scattering.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21711719 PMCID: PMC3211274 DOI: 10.1186/1556-276X-6-217
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703
Crystallite and particle size results in copper-based nanofluids
| Material | Dispersant | Crystallite size (nm) | Particle size (nm) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cu prepared using oleic acid | SDBS | 15-45 | 120-200 | This study |
| Cu prepared using CTAB | SDBS | 10-37 | 60-100 | This study |
| Cu | None | 30-40 | 400-500 | Sinha |
| Cu | None, SDBS | 25 | ~5,500; ~150 | Wang |
| Cu | None | 50-100 | Not reported | Liu |
| Cu | None | 10 | Not reported | Eastman |
| Cu | None | 100 | Not reported | Xuan and Li [ |
| Cu | None | 25-30 | Not reported | Velasco |
| Cu | None, SDBS | 25-60 | 5,560; 130 | Li |
| Cu | PVP | 5-10 | Not reported | Yu |
Figure 1Experimental setup for thermal conductivity characterization of the nanofluids.
Figure 2Particle size distribution. Particle size distribution measurements for the nanofluids manufactured using oleic acid- and CTAB-prepared copper powders dispersed in water and 15 wt.% SDBS.
Figure 3Dynamic thermal conductivity data. For de-ionized water and the 0.55 vol.% and 1.0 vol.% nanofluids prepared with the oleic acid- and CTAB-prepared copper powders.
Figure 4Comparison of thermal conductivity enhancement for copper-based nanofluids.