| Literature DB >> 33265424 |
Yunlu Pan1, Dalei Jing2, He Zhang1, Xuezeng Zhao1.
Abstract
As a significant interfacial property for micro/nano fluidic system, the effective boundary slip can be induced by the surface roughness. However, the effect of surface roughness on the effective slip is still not clear, both increased and decreased effective boundary slip were found with increased roughness. The present work develops a simplified model to study the effect of surface roughness on the effective boundary slip. In the created rough models, the reference position of the rough surfaces to determinate effective boundary slip was set based on ISO/ASME standard and the surface roughness parameters including Ra (arithmetical mean deviation of the assessed profile), Rsm (mean width of the assessed profile elements) and shape of the texture varied to form different surface roughness. Then, the effective boundary slip of fluid flow through the rough surface was analyzed by using COMSOL 5.3. The results show that the effective boundary slip induced by surface roughness of fully wetted rough surface keeps negative and further decreases with increasing Ra or decreasing Rsm. Different shape of roughness texture also results in different effective slip. A simplified corrected method for the measured effective boundary slip was developed and proved to be efficient when the Rsm is no larger than 200 nm. Another important finding in the present work is that the convective heat transfer firstly increases followed by an unobvious change with increasing Ra, while the effective boundary slip keeps decreasing. It is believed that the increasing Ra enlarges the area of solid-liquid interface for convective heat transfer, however, when Ra is large enough, the decreasing roughness-induced effective boundary slip counteracts the enhancement effect of roughness itself on the convective heat transfer.Entities:
Keywords: convective heat transfer; effective boundary slip; surface roughness
Year: 2018 PMID: 33265424 PMCID: PMC7512853 DOI: 10.3390/e20050334
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Entropy (Basel) ISSN: 1099-4300 Impact factor: 2.524
Figure 1Schematic of the roughness texture in (a) the cone model and (b) the groove model, and the schematic of the flow on the (c) Cone model, (d) Groove-P model and (e) Groove-V model.
Figure 2Effective boundary slip (reversed) vs. Ra on the cone model with Rsm = 10 nm (Green); 20 nm (Black); 100 nm (Dark blue); 200 nm (Pink); 1000 nm (Red); 2000 nm (Light blue). The −b and Ra are in log scale.
Figure 3Effective boundary slip (reversed) vs. Ra on three different surface models: Cone model; Groove-V model and Groove-P model. The Ra is in log scale.
Figure 4Error of corrected effective boundary slip (obtained experimentally from AFM) on cone model with different Ra and Rsm.
Figure 5Increasing rate of Nusselt number for a pressure-driven flow in a micro channel with one-side rough surface in Groove-V model. The Rsm is fixed at 100 nm. The effective boundary slip are also shown.