| Literature DB >> 24678607 |
Rad Sadri1, Goodarz Ahmadi2, Hussein Togun1, Mahidzal Dahari1, Salim Newaz Kazi1, Emad Sadeghinezhad1, Nashrul Zubir1.
Abstract
Recently, there has been considerable interest in the use of nanofluids for enhancing thermal performance. It has been shown that carbon nanotubes (CNTs) are capable of enhancing the thermal performance of conventional working liquids. Although much work has been devoted on the impact of CNT concentrations on the thermo-physical properties of nanofluids, the effects of preparation methods on the stability, thermal conductivity and viscosity of CNT suspensions are not well understood. This study is focused on providing experimental data on the effects of ultrasonication, temperature and surfactant on the thermo-physical properties of multi-walled carbon nanotube (MWCNT) nanofluids. Three types of surfactants were used in the experiments, namely, gum arabic (GA), sodium dodecylbenzene sulfonate (SDBS) and sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). The thermal conductivity and viscosity of the nanofluid suspensions were measured at various temperatures. The results showed that the use of GA in the nanofluid leads to superior thermal conductivity compared to the use of SDBS and SDS. With distilled water as the base liquid, the samples were prepared with 0.5 wt.% MWCNTs and 0.25% GA and sonicated at various times. The results showed that the sonication time influences the thermal conductivity, viscosity and dispersion of nanofluids. The thermal conductivity of nanofluids was typically enhanced with an increase in temperature and sonication time. In the present study, the maximum thermal conductivity enhancement was found to be 22.31% (the ratio of 1.22) at temperature of 45°C and sonication time of 40 min. The viscosity of nanofluids exhibited non-Newtonian shear-thinning behaviour. It was found that the viscosity of MWCNT nanofluids increases to a maximum value at a sonication time of 7 min and subsequently decreases with a further increase in sonication time. The presented data clearly indicated that the viscosity and thermal conductivity of nanofluids are influenced by the sonication time. Image analysis was carried out using TEM in order to observe the dispersion characteristics of all samples. The findings revealed that the CNT agglomerates breakup with increasing sonication time. At high sonication times, all agglomerates disappear and the CNTs are fragmented and their mean length decreases.Entities:
Keywords: Dispersant; Gum arabic; MWCNTs; Multi-walled carbon nanotubes; Nanofluids; SDBS; SDS; Surfactant; Thermal conductivity; Viscosity
Year: 2014 PMID: 24678607 PMCID: PMC4006636 DOI: 10.1186/1556-276X-9-151
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703
Summary of experimental investigations on thermal conductivity of CNT nanofluids
| Choi et al. 2001 [ | MWCNT | Oil | 25 nm × 50 μm | 1 vol.% | 150% | - |
| Xie et al. 2003 [ | MWCNT | Decene/ethylene glycol/water | 15 nm × 30 μm | 1 vol.% | 20%/13%/7% | - |
| (1.20, 1.13, 1.07) | ||||||
| Assael et al. 2004 [ | MWCNT | (+ SDS)-water | 100 nm × 70 μm | 0.6 vol.% | 38% | - |
| Wen and Ding 2004 [ | MWCNT | (+ Sodium dodecyl benzene)-water | 20-60 (diameter) | 0.04-0.84 vol.% | 1.04-1.24 | Temperature effect (20°C) |
| Wen and Ding 2004 [ | MWCNT | (+ Sodium dodecyl benzene)-water | 20-60 (diameter) | 0.04-0.84 vol.% | 1.05-1.31 | Temperature effect (45°C) |
| Assael et al. 2005 [ | MWCNT | (+ CTAB)-water | L 10 μm | 0.6 vol.% | 1.34 | - |
| OD 100-250 | 34% | |||||
| Assael et al. 2005 [ | DWCNT | (+ CTAB)-water | 5 nm (diameter) | 1.00 vol.% | 1.08 | Dispersant effect |
| Assael et al. 2005 [ | DWCNT | (+ CTAB)-water | 5 nm (diameter) | 0.75 vol.% | 1.03 | - |
| Liu et al. 2005 [ | MWCNT | Ethylene glycol | 20-50 (diameter) | 0.20-1.00 | 1.02-1.12 | Two-step method |
| (1 vol.%) | (12.4%) | |||||
| Liu et al. 2005 [ | MWCNT | (+ | 20-50 (diameter) | 1.00-2.00 (2 vol.%) | 1.09-1.30 (30%) | Two-step method |
| Marquis and Chibante 2005 [ | SWCNT | (+ Dispersant)-diesel oil (Shell/Rotella 15 W-40) | (10-50) × (0.3-10 μm) | 0.25-1.00 | 1.10-1.46 | Two-step method |
| Ding et al. 2006 [ | MWCNT | (+ Gum arabic)-water | - | 0.05-0.49 | 1.00-1.10 | Temperature effect (20°C) |
| Ding et al. 2006 [ | MWCNT | (+ Gum arabic)-water | - | 0.05-0.49 | 1.07-1.27 | Temperature effect (25°C) |
| Ding et al. 2006 [ | MWCNT | (+ Gum arabic)-water | - | 0.05-0.49 | 1.18-1.8 | Temperature effect (30°C) |
| Hwang et al. 2006 [ | MWCNT | Mineral oil | - | 0.5 | 1.09 | - |
| Yang et al. 2006 [ | MWCNT | (+ Polyisobutene succinimide)-poly(α-olefin | - | 0.04-0.34 | 1.06-3.00 | Two-step method |
| Amrollahi et al. 2008 [ | MWCNT | Ethylene glycol | OD 1-4 | 2.5 vol.% | 20% | Temperature effect (25°C-50°C) |
| ID 0.8-1.1 | ||||||
| Amrollahi et al. 2008 [ | MWCNT | Ethylene glycol | OD 1-4 | 0.5 vol.% | 1.05-1.2 | Ultrasonication effect (1-24 h) |
| ID 0.8-1.1 | 2.5 vol.% | 1.1-1.32 | ||||
| Garg et al. 2009 [ | MWCNT | (+ Gum arabic)-water (35 °C) | OD 10-20 nm | 1 wt.% | 20% | Ultrasonication effect (40 min) |
| L 0.5-40 μm | ||||||
| Chen and Xie 2010 [ | MWCNT | (+ Cationic Gemini)-water | OD 30-50 nm | 0.6 vol.% | 5.6%-34% | Temperature effect (5°C-65°C) |
| L ~ 20 μm | ||||||
| Phuoc et al. 2011 [ | MWCNT | (+ Chitosan)-water | OD 20-30 nm | (0.5-3) wt.% (0.24-1.43) vol.% | 2.3%-13% | Two-step method (35°C) |
| ID 5-10 nm | ||||||
| L 10-30 μm | ||||||
| Singh et al. 2012 [ | MWCNT | Ethylene glycol + water | D 60-30 nm | 0.4 wt.% | 72% | Nitric and sulfuric acid treatment |
| L 5-15 μm | ||||||
| Kumaresan and Velraj 2012 [ | MWCNT | (+ SDBS)-ethylene glycol + water | D 30-50 nm | 0.45 vol.% | 19.75% | Temperature effect (40°C) |
| L 10-20 μm | ||||||
| Ruan and Jacobi 2012 [ | MWCNT | Ethylene glycol | OD 10-30 | 0.5 wt.% | 23% | Ultrasonication effect 1,355 min |
| L 10-30 | ||||||
| ID 5-10 | ||||||
| Indhuja et al. 2013 [ | MWCNT | (+ Gum arabic)-water | ID 10 nm | (0.14-0.24) vol.% | 0.61-0.67 (3.2%-10%) | Effect of concentration |
| L 5-15 μm | ||||||
| Indhuja et al. 2013 [ | MWCNT | (+ Gum arabic)-water | ID 10 nm | 0.5 wt.% | 0.66-0.93 (8%-33%) | Temperature effect (28°C-60°C) |
| L 5-15 μm | ||||||
| Indhuja et al. 2013 [ | MWCNT | (+ Gum arabic)-water | ID 10 nm | 0.3 wt.% | 0.63-0.88 (5%-26%) | Temperature effect (28°C-60°C) |
| L 5-15 μm |
DWCNT, double-walled carbon nanotubes; ID, inside diameter; OD, outside diameter; L, length (μm); D, density.
Properties of multi-walled carbon nanotubes
| Sample (MWCNT) | 20-30 | 10-30 | ~2.1 | >95 | 2,800 | 110-130 |
Figure 1TEM image of multi-walled carbon nanotubes (as received).
Figure 2Nanofluids preparation set-up.
Figure 3Experimental set-up for thermal conductivity measurements.
Figure 4Benchmark test for water thermal conductivity.
Figure 5Effects of SDBS, SDS and GA on thermal conductivity of base fluid.
Figure 6Comparison of thermal conductivity of CNT nanofluids containing GA, SDBS and SDS dispersants.
Figure 7Effects of ultrasonication time and temperature on thermal conductivity of nanofluids.
Figure 8Variation of thermal conductivity ratio as function of temperature at various ultrasonication times.
Variation of thermal conductivity enhancement (%) as function of temperature at various ultrasonication times
| 0.5 | 20 | 0.67 | 2.02 | 2.86 | 3.54 | 3.87 | 4.38 |
| | 25 | 0.66 | 1.82 | 2.65 | 3.48 | 4.14 | 4.80 |
| | 30 | 0.65 | 1.95 | 2.76 | 4.55 | 5.20 | 6.02 |
| | 35 | 0.80 | 2.24 | 3.21 | 5.45 | 6.89 | 7.85 |
| | 40 | 1.27 | 4.46 | 7.64 | 10.67 | 12.10 | 13.38 |
| 45 | 2.37 | 7.59 | 13.13 | 17.72 | 20.41 | 22.31 | |
aValues are expressed in percentage (%).
Figure 9Comparison of thermal conductivity between current experimental data and previous studies for 0.5 wt.% MWCNT nanofluids.
Figure 10Variation of thermal conductivity as function of ultrasonication time at various temperatures.
Figure 11Reproducibility of thermal conductivity data of MWCNT nanofluids at 40°C over 28 days.
Figure 12Variation of dynamic viscosity as function of shear rate at various sonication times. (a) 15°C. (b) 30°C. (c) 45°C.
Figure 13Variation of dynamic viscosity as function of sonication time at various shear rates. (a) 15°C. (b) 30°C. (c) 45°C.
Figure 14Variation of viscosity ratio as function of thermal conductivity ratio for MWCNT nanofluid suspensions. (a) 30°C. (b) 45°C.
Figure 15Digital images of aqueous suspensions of 0.5 wt.% MWCNT dispersed using GA sonicated for different times. (a) 2 min. (b) 7 min. (c) 10 min. (d) 20 min. (e) 30 min. (f) 40 min.
Figure 16TEM images of samples (0.5 wt.% MWCNTs, 0.25 wt.% GA) at various sonication times. (a) 2 min. (b) 7 min. (c) 10 min. (d) 20 min. (e) 30 min. (f) 40 min.