| Literature DB >> 32198454 |
Zongjie Lyu1,2, Amin Asadi1, Ibrahim M Alarifi3,4, Vakkar Ali3, Loke K Foong5,6.
Abstract
There are many debates on the preparation methods and the role of ultrasonication on the stability, thermophysical properties, and heat transfer performance of nanofluids. The present study, which is the continuation of the authors previous study, the effects of ultrasonication on the thermal and fluid dynamic performance of MWCNT-water nanofluid, over a different range of temperatures and solid concentrations, based on the thermophysical properties of the nanofluid, has been investigated. The effects of ultrasonication time on the stability and thermophysical properties of the nanofluid were studied over 30 days of the samples preparation. The thermophysical properties of the nanofluid have been experimentally measured at the optimum ultrasonication time. Using the experimental data, and employing different figures-of-merit, the effects that the addition of MWCNTs had on the heat transfer effectiveness and pumping power have been studied. It was confirmed that the nanofluid is a good heat transfer fluid, with a negligible penalty in pumping power. The thermal and fluid dynamic performance of the nanofluid in a microchannel heat sink has also been studied, by comparing the enhancement ratio of the convective heat transfer coefficient and the increase in pumping power.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32198454 PMCID: PMC7083888 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-62143-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
A summary of the available literature on the HTP based on different FOMs.
| Studied NF | Temperature range | SC | Remarks | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fe2O3-water | 10–70 °C | 5–20 vol. % | The dynamic viscosity and thermal conductivity of the nanofluid were experimentally measured. The HTP was evaluated, based on the | Colla |
| Al2O3-MWCNT/oil | 25–50 °C | 0.125–1.5 vol. % | The HTP of the nanofluid was evaluated, based on the Prasher | Asadi |
| ZnO-EG/water | 283.15–343.15 K | 0–5 vol. % | The dynamic viscosity and thermal conductivity were experimentally measured and based on the experimental data; the HTP was evaluated. The | Cabaleiro[ |
| Mg(OH)2-MWCNT/oil | 25–60 °C | 0.25–2 vol. % | Prasher | Asadi |
| GOnPs/EG-water | 283.15–343.15 K | 0–0.5 vol. % | Considering the experimental data of dynamic viscosity and TC, the HTP in both the internal laminar and turbulent flow regimes was evaluated, using Prasher | Cabaleiro |
| ZnO-oil and MgO-oil | 15–55 °C | 0.125–1.5 vol. % | The HTP for the laminar and turbulent flow regimes were evaluated, considering the experimental data of thermophysical properties. | Asadi and Pourfattah[ |
| MgO/EG | 298.15 K | 0–20 vol. % | The HTP of the MgO-EG nanofluid were evaluated according to the Prasher | Zyla[ |
| MgO-MWCNT/oil | 25–50 °C | 0.25–2 wt. % | The HTP of the nanofluid in different temperatures and solid concentrations was evaluated for the laminar and turbulent flow regimes, employing the Prasher | Asadi |
| Al2O3-water and Al2O3-polyalphaolefin | 298.15 K | 1–5 vol. % | The HTP of the nanofluids were estimated using different FOMs under three different constraints: constant Reynold number, flow rate, and PP. | Yu and Liu[ |
| MWCNT-ZnO/oil | 15–55 °C | 0.125–1 vol. % | The HTP was evaluated, based on the rheological and thermophysical properties of the nanofluid for different temperatures and solid concentrations. | Asadi[ |
Detailed information of MWCNT nanoparticles[54]. (Reprinted with the permission of Elsevier).
| Outside diameter | <7 nm |
| Inside diameter | 2–5 nm |
| Length | 10–30 um |
| SSA | >500 m2/g |
| Electrical conductivity | >100 s/cm |
| True density | 2.1 g/cm3 |
| Purity | >95 wt % |
Figure 1(A) TEM image and (B) XRD graph of MWCNT nanoparticles[54]. (Reprinted with the permission of Elsevier).
Figure 2Results of the stability analysis. (A) Zeta potential analysis versus solid concentration for different ultrasonication times, and (B) visual observation versus ultrasonication time for a solid concentration of 0.5 vol. %[54]. (Reprinted with the permission of Elsevier).
Figure 3Variations of thermal conductivity of MWCNT-water nanofluid versus temperature and solid concentration, at the optimum ultrasonication time (60 min)[54].
Figure 4Variations of the dynamic viscosity of MWCNT-water nanofluid versus temperature and solid concentration at the optimum ultrasonication time (60 min).
Figure 5Variations of Cµ/Ck (Prasher et al.[48] FOM) versus temperature in different solid concentrations, in the fully developed internal laminar flow regime.
Figure 6Variations of the relative thermal conductivity of MWCNT-water nanofluid versus temperature for different solid concentrations.
Figure 7Variations of Monf/Mobf of the studied nanofluid versus temperature for different solid concentrations, in the internal turbulent flow regime.
Figure 8The effects of using MWCNT-water nanofluid on the increase of pumping power, in the internal laminar flow regime.
Figure 9The effects of using MWCNT-water nanofluid on the increase of pumping power, in the internal turbulent flow regime.
Figure 10A schematic view of the studied MCHS.
Figure 11The variations of CHTC versus temperature for different solid concentrations, for the case of fully developed internal laminar flow regime.
Figure 12The thermal and fluid dynamic performance of MWCNT-water nanofluid in the studied range of temperatures and solid concentrations.