| Literature DB >> 32620923 |
M C Mbambo1,2, S Khamlich3,4, T Khamliche3,4, M K Moodley5, K Kaviyarasu6,7, I G Madiba3,4, M J Madito4, M Khenfouch3,4, J Kennedy3,4,8, M Henini3,4,9, E Manikandan3,4,10, M Maaza11,12.
Abstract
We report on the synthesis and enhanced thermal conductivity of stable Ag-decorated 2-D graphene nanocomposite in <span class="Chemical">ethylene glycol based nanofluid by laser liquid solid interaction. A surfactant free nanofluid of Ag nanoparticles anchored onto the 2-D graphene sheets were synthesized using a two-step laser liquid solid interaction approach. In order to understand a pulsed Nd:YAG laser at the fundamental frequency (λ = 1,064 nm) to ablate Ag and graphite composite target submerged in ethylene glycol (EG) to form AgNPs decorated 2-D GNs-EG based nanofluid. From a heat transfer point of view, it was observed that the thermal conductivity of this stable Ag-graphene/EG is significantly enhanced by a factor of about 32.3%; this is highest reported value for a graphene based nanofluid.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32620923 PMCID: PMC7335043 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-67418-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Universal configuration of a nanofluid consisting of nanoscaled particles in suspension in a host standard fluid.
Figure 2Comparative scale of thermal conductivity of various materials: Organic materials, standard heat transfer fluids, metals and their oxides.
Figure 3Simplified configuration of the laser liquid solid interaction set-up. The normal incidence laser beam is focused on the metallic target coated with Ethylene Glycol.
Figure 4Possible mechanisms causing the ablation in laser liquid solid interaction. Cavitation and implosion of the formed vapor bubbles.
Figure 5(a, b) High Resolution Transmission Electron Microscopy Images of the Graphene sheets and (c) its corresponding Selected Area Electron Diffraction of the GNs-EG samples.
Figure 6(a, b) High Resolution Transmission Electron Microscopy Images of the Silver Nanoparticles and (c) their corresponding Selected Area Electron Diffraction of the AgNPs-EG samples.
Figure 7(a, b) High Resolution Transmission Electron Microscopy Images of the Silver Nanoparticles densely decorating Graphene sheets and (c) their corresponding Selected Area Electron Diffraction in the AgNPs-GNs-EG samples.
Figure 8Typical Elemental Energy Dispersive X-rays Spectroscopy spectrum of AgNPs-GNs-EG samples.
Figure 9Typical room temperature Raman spectrum of AgNPs-GNs-EG samples.
Figure 10(a) Typical room temperature X-rays diffraction spectrum of GNs-EG samples (b) and that of the pure graphite target.
Figure 11(a) Typical Optical Absorbance of AgNPs-GNs-EG samples compared to that of GNs-EG and AgNPs-EG profiles; (b) Cumulative fit peak of the various π−π*, n–p* transitions, Graphene, Graphene oxide absorbance peaks and the Ag plasmonic absorbance.
Major characteristics of the various observed peaks within the absorbance spectrum of the AgNPs-GNs-EG nanofluid.
| Peak-1 | Peak-2 | Peak-3 | Peak-4 | Peak-5 | Peak-6 | Peak-7 | Peak-8 | Peak-9 (Ag-plasmon) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| λ (nm) | 201.50 | 208.06 | 221.08 | 230.12 | 239.77 | 256.40 | 275.51 | 303.56 | 430.70 |
| Δλ/(nm) | 0.53 | 16.27 | 8.78 | 7.73 | 14.3 | 15.03 | 29.37 | 14.80 | 96.04 |
Figure 12Thermal conductivity of the various nanofluids compared to the pure EG in the temperature range of 25–45 °C.
Reported thermal conductivity enhancement of graphene—EG based nanofluids.
| References | Host fluid | Configuration | Temperature range (°C) | Thermal conductivity enhancement (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baby and Ramaprabhu[ | EG | Exfoliated graphene | 25–50 | 4–7% |
| Baby and Ramaprabhu[ | EG | Hydrogen exfoliated graphene | 25–50 | 1–7.5% |
| Lee and Rhee[ | EG | Graphene nanoplatelets | 10–90 | Up to 32% |
| Shende and Sundara[ | EG | Nitrogen doped graphene-MNT | 25–50 | Up to 15.1% |
| Wang[ | Exfoliated graphene | 25–65 | 15.5–18.6% | |
| Mbambo et al. (present work) | EG vapor—TVEG1 ~ 97.3 °C | Ag—decorated graphene nanocomposites | 25–45 | ~ 32.3% |