| Literature DB >> 36013901 |
Pawel Szymanski1, Dariusz Mikielewicz1, Sasan Fooladpanjeh2.
Abstract
Thermal control systems have been introduced as an important part of electronic devices, enabling thermal management of their electronic components. Loop heat pipe (LHP) is a passive two-phase heat transfer device with significant potential for numerous applications, such as aerospace applications, high-power LEDs, and solar central receivers. Its advantages are high heat transfer capability, low thermal resistance, long-distance heat transfer, and compact structure. The essential role of wick structures on the performance of LHPs has already been highlighted, but no comprehensive review is available that deals with different parameters such as LHP design and wick size, which are largely decisive and effective in achieving a practical level of thermal transmission governed by wick structures. To rely on this necessity, this article summarizes, analyzes, and classifies advancements in the design and fabrication of wick structures. The main conclusion to be drawn after careful monitoring and weighing of the related literature is that LHPs with composites and additively manufactured wicks show a higher heat transfer coefficient than other conventional structures. Indeed, future works should be focused on the design of more structurally efficient wicks, which may allow us to optimize materials and geometrical parameters of wick structure for higher heat transfer through LHPs.Entities:
Keywords: additive manufacturing; composite wick; loop heat pipe; thermal conductivity; wick structures
Year: 2022 PMID: 36013901 PMCID: PMC9416206 DOI: 10.3390/ma15165765
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.748
Figure 1Categorization of different components of an LHP system based on wick structures, evaporators, and condenser.
Figure 2Designs of various LHP components to obtain high efficiency.
Figure 3Principal geometry scheme of an LHP in components detail.
Comparison between recent works related to the performance of LHPs.
| Working Fluid | Power (W) | Property | Effect | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Water | 20–160 | LHP through |
The bypass line reduced the minimum startup time of the LHP; The bypass line did not significantly affect the thermal resistance of the LHP. | [ |
| Water | 20–580 | Copper nanowire |
Heat transfer coefficient values increased nearly 2.7 times for evaporators with Cu coating; Thermal resistance values decreased by approximately one-third in nanowire-coated surfaces; For a maximum heat flux a temperature difference of 8 °C was obtained for all copper nanowire coated surfaces. | [ |
| Water | 50–300 | Oscillating LHP |
LHP could start-up successfully with the working fluid of water. | [ |
| Acetone | 60–240 | Flat evaporator |
LHP transported heat up to 260 W; The minimum thermal resistance of the LHP was 0.13 K/W. | [ |
| Acetone | N/A 1 | LHP with |
The acetone-charged LHP could successfully realize the startup; Increase heat transport capability from 60 to 100 W. | [ |
| Ethanol | 25–180 | Miniature LHP with |
There is no bubble generation in the compensation chamber at any heat input prior to deprime. | [ |
| Ammonia | 6–50 | Stainless steel |
During the start-up, the superheat needed to start the nucleate boiling is always greater than 10 °C at Q = 6 to 50 W; The heat transfer capacity is greater than 330 W; LHP is insensitive to the relative orientation of the evaporator and the CC under gravity. | [ |
| Ammonia | 2.5–180 | Stainless steel LHP with flat disk evaporator |
The heat load is transferred by LHP up to 180 W at a heat sink temperature of −10 °C; LHP starts up successfully at a minimum heat load of 2.5 W. | [ |
| Ammonia | 5–370 | Stainless steel LHP |
LHP quickly responded to variable heat load and no temperature oscillation occurred; LHP could handle a maximum heat load of 370 W; Decrease the thermal resistance of the evaporator by increasing the heat load. | [ |
| Ethanol-Water | 100–300 | Stainless steel-nickel LHP |
LHP with 60% concentration of working fluid mixture showed a lower operating temperature of 178.1 °C; Mixture of ethanol and water preserve better steady-state heat transfer performance. | [ |
| Methane | 2–10 | Cryogenic LHP |
LHP could realize the supercritical startup successfully with an auxiliary heat load of 2 W; The methane cryogenic LHP is not sensitive to the charged pressure of the working fluid, and it operates within a relatively large range. | [ |
| R245fa | 10–160 | Evaporator with a strengthened ribbed plate |
Tolerating working pressure for evaporator with the permissible temperature of the normal action for electronics; The evaporator active zone was greatly extended, effectively reducing the transferred heat flux; Temperature difference among each monitoring point less than 0.5 °C and chill the heat source evenly. | [ |
| R245fa | 10–140 | LHP with a |
LHP showed a good startup performance and a quick response to the heat load recycle at a heat load range of 10 to 140 W; Maintaining the evaporator heat transfer coefficient at a high level. | [ |
| Methanol | N/A | LHP with |
LHP has a minimum thermal resistance of 0.18 K.W−1 at 220 W; The maximum heat flux is 39.3 W.cm−2, maintaining the heating wall temperature within 85 °C. | [ |
| Methanol | 2–60 | Bi-porous |
The miniature LHP can successfully start-up at a heat load of 2 W; Minimum thermal resistance of the evaporator equal to 0.27 °C/W was achieved at a maximum heat load of 60 W. | [ |
| Methanol | 30–170 | Micro/nano-hybrid structures |
The maximum heat transfer coefficient of 42.17 kW/m2.K is achieved; Increased tolerance of the proposed new heating pipe system to a heat flux of 35.12 W/cm2. | [ |
1 Not available.
Figure 4The most common wick types are sintered powder, metal meshes, composite wicks, sintered metal fibers, grooved wicks, additively manufactured wicks, mesh-groove wicks, and bi-porous wicks.
Figure 5A schematic of a new design for the condensate liquid return path comprising the liquid transportation line and liquid upper feed header [86].
Figure 6Schematic illustration of a micro-nano bi-porous copper surface with hydrogen bubbles departing the cathode using the dynamic bubble template electrodeposition method [90].
Figure 7(a) Schematic of a heat pipe with a two-phase flow loop, (b) sinter of non-uniform copper particles at 600 °C using an isothermal furnace under a vacuum, and (c) suspension of graphene oxides in distilled water and the process of spraying this solution on copper wicks [94].
Figure 8Schematic illustration of the fabrication process for preparing NC foam using the template method and PMMA microspheres. (a) The CNTs were dispersed in Polyacrylonitrile (PAN)/Dimethylformamide (DMF)- Isopropyl alcohol (IPA) solution and then Poly methyl methacrylate (PMMA) microspheres were added in. (b) The well-dispersed CNT and PMMA microspheres in PAN/DMF-IPA solution after sonication. (c) The mixture of CNTs/PAN/PMMA microspheres after filtration. (d) The NC foam after thermal treatments [95].
Figure 9A schematic representation of the sample preparation processes form graphite plate to MCPW. (a,b) A micro grooved graphite mold is machined on a graphite plate by a computer numerical control machine. (c) Solid-phase sintering is carried out by filling the graphite mold with the copper powder. (d) PCPWs are finally separated from the graphite mold. (e) The cleaned samples which washed in acetone and ethanol solution are put into an oven and dried at 50 ◦C and finally, the etched sintered-powder wicks form a dense layer of oxide nanostructures (NGPWs). (f) Nano grass in the sintered powder wick is removed by a chemical cleaning process to leave porous structures covered by high density microcavities (MCPWs) [98].
The comparison between different attempts to increase LHP performance by using wick structures.
| Wick | Working Fluid | Power (W) | Thermal | Main Findings | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cement-Pouring porous wick | Methanol | 10–80 | 0.2 |
LHP can start up at a heat load range from 5 W to 80 W with the evaporator surface temperature below 100 °C; Increasing the thermal resistance of the evaporator by increasing the heat load at a heat sink temperature of °C. | [ |
| Porous cylindrical wick | Pentane | 10–100 | N/A |
The vapor is able to flow along the grooves instead of penetrating the wick; Reduce thermal performance with polishing; Appropriate modification in wettability of the wick and delay in the occurrence of boiling with gold coating; Increase the thermal performance of the evaporator with the coating; The coating reduces the strong effect of the surface topography on the optimum heat flux for a zirconia wick; The gold coating has a positive influence on the optimum heat load of a zirconia sample with a concave surface. | [ |
| Porous copper fiber sintered wicks (PCFSWs) | Water- | N/A | N/A |
Capillary pumping amount of PCFSWs with homogeneous porosity first increases and then decreases with increasing porosity; Much larger capillary pumping amount of 90–70% gradient porosity PCFSWs is observed with the high porosity; Centrifugal tests showed the rough PCFSWs with deionized water and low porosity possess a smaller centrifugal amount; Ethanol has a larger centrifugal ratio compared with that of deionized water. | [ |
| Porous NiO wick | N/A | 20–160 | N/A |
Heat location, provided by the NiO wick, helped improve the thermal conversion efficiency; Localized vaporization in the micro channels of the NiO wick’s surface further improves the heat utilization efficiency; Special macroscopic thermal insulation of NiO wick provided a thermal barrier to minimize heat loss to the brine; The corresponding heat-conversion efficiency is 65.2% and 90.7%, respectively. | [ |
| Microstructure of porous copper wick | N/A | N/A | N/A |
Maximum amount of capillary height was reached 27.5 mm; Increasing the porosity of the coatings produced an even greater increase in the mass of liquid rising in the copper strips; The permeability of coatings increases with their effective porosity; Capillary pressure increases for a given groove size. | [ |
| Sintered copper powder wick | Water | 10–100 | 0.05 |
The sample with 75–100 µm performed best in both the thermal resistance and the heat transport capability; The sample with 75–100 µm could start-up successfully within 10 min without temperature overshoot and oscillation; The sample with 75–100 µm performed better for its lower operating temperature in gravity-assisted orientation; The minimum total thermal resistances for the sample with 50–75, 75–100, and 100–125 µm in gravity-assisted orientation are approximately 0.038 °C/W (50 W), 0.042 °C/W (80 W) and 0.049 °C/W (80 W), respectively. | [ |
| Sintered porous wicks using | Ethanol | N/A | N/A |
The droplets on the spherical powder samples always spread more quickly than those on the irregular powder samples with the same powder sizes; Permeability of irregular powder samples is much larger than that of the spherical ones with the same powder size range; The wicks with medium powder size of 90–120 µm, maintained a good balance between permeability and capillary pressure; For both spherical and irregular powders, the slopes of the pressure drop decrease significantly with the increase of the powder sizes. | [ |
| Bi-porous | N/A | N/A | N/A |
The sample with the lowest percentage of mass of copper 700 °C has the lowest amount of thermal diffusivity; Highest evaporation rate and lowest thermal diffusivity of sample B with porosity of 44.7%; Samples sintered at 700 °C and 750 °C have higher porosity than that sintered at 800 °C; Optimum value of permeability was obtained for sample B equal to 1.305 × 10−12 m2; Evaporation rate is highest for the sample of composition (%Cu) at 60:30:15. | [ |
| Biporous structure of multi-walled | Water | 20–100 | 0.5 |
Thermal resistance was reduced by 14.3% in the 10-bilayer layer-by-layer-assembled MWCNT-PEI coating; Thicker nanoporous layers did not improve thermal performance; 40 bilayers reduced volume of microporous structures and increased thermal resistance; The hydrophilic nature originating from the PEI shells surrounding the MWCNTs chemically contributed to the enhanced interfacial area between the working fluid and heated surfaces; The nanoporous structures improved thermal energy transport inside the heat pipes; The layer-by-layer-assembled MWCNT-PEI coating on the copper-sintered microstructure structurally induced enhanced capillary wicking; 40 bilayers did not exhibit improved thermal performance. | [ |
| Micro-grooved wick | Acetone | N/A | N/A |
Thermal resistance remained stable from 0.055 to 0.074 K/W; The micro-grooved wick with reentrant cavity array vapor chamber showed good start-up performance; The micro-grooved wick with reentrant cavity array vapor chamber showed competitive thermal performance; The micro-grooved wick with reentrant cavity array vapor chamber yielded a fast temperature response and low start-up heat load. | [ |
| Bi porous spiral | Water | 10–18 | 0.13 |
FO, FI, and SI UTHPs had the highest thermal resistance and heat transfer capacities with optimal filing ratio; Reduce thermal resistance of the FI UTHP by 6.32 to 25.9%; Increasing the filling ratio at the same heating power as before caused the temperature of each point on the UTPHs to decrease; Increasing the capillary force of the wick improved the unbalanced temperature distribution of UTHP under high power; The FI UTHP had the lowest evaporation thermal resistance; SI sample of a UTHP had the lowest condensation thermal resistance; Increase the thermal resistance of evaporation with increasing heating power. | [ |
| Spiral coil wick | Ammonia | 40–120 | 0.05 |
At higher heat loads, the axial-grooved heat pipe could maintain the kefc level, but both arterial heat pipes (0.4 and 0.5 mm) slowly dropped in kefc; Coil wick with wire of 0.5 mm diameter achieved a higher value than the wire of 0.4 mm diameter for all heating power for evaporator film coefficients; Wire of 0.4 mm diameter performed better than the 0.5 mm except at low heat load; As heat load increased, the thermal resistance sharply rose for the charged container without coil but only grew gently for the arterial heat pipes. | [ |
| Gradedmini-grooves | Methyl alcohol | N/A | N/A |
The effective thermal conductivity coefficient of Case 2 (11.666 W.m−1K−1) is higher than those of Case 1 (10.378 W.m−1K−1) and Case 3 (9794 W.m−1K−1); The capillary radiuses of Case 2 and Case 3 are lower than that of Case 1 at the evaporation section; The capillary pressure differences of the three cases between the evaporation and condensation sections are 40.20, 42.83, and 46.31 Pa, respectively; The liquid velocities of Case 2 and Case 3 are higher than that of Case 1; The vapor velocity of Case 2 is relatively lower than those of Case 1 and Case 3 | [ |
| A parallel-groove wick, a sintered mesh-groove | Water | 12–70 | N/A |
For the horizontal operation of the composite wick, the Qmax of about 60 W is much higher than 21–25 W for the 2 × 200 mesh wick and about 10 W for the groove wick; Under a tilt angle of 30–90°, the Qmax may reach 39–49 W, in contrast, the 2 × 200 mesh wick cannot operate at Q = 14 W under α ≥ 30°. | [ |
| Multi-layer wick | Water | 5–80 | 0.18 |
Multi-layer wick heat pipe exhibits a higher heat transfer capacity in the anti-gravity direction; Critical heat load of the multilayer wick heat pipe was 79 W at a fully anti-gravity orientation. | [ |
| Mesh-type wick structure with nanostructured | N/A | 0.5–6 | N/A |
Nanostructured super hydrophilic surface increases thermal performance compared with that with the conventional base copper surface; Capillary performance of the single mesh wick is shown to decrease as the wire diameter or pore size increases. | [ |
| Hybrid spiral | Water | 10–20 | 0.02 |
Increasing the distance from the UTHP tail end reduces the temperature of each testing point of the UTHP samples; Maximum heat transport capacity of the SB and SF UTHPs increased by 33.33–53.85%; 27.53% to 42.92% reduction for total thermal resistance; The lowest Rt for the SC UTHP with the heating power below 13 W; Maximum heat transport capacity of the SA and SH UTHP samples were 15 W and 13 W, respectively. | [ |
| Single-layer wicks (SW) and composite wicks | Water | 40–140 | 0.22 |
Tew of SW3 and SW4 samples were slightly higher than those of SW1 and SW2 samples at low heat loads; he = 24,932 W/m2K with highest amount at Q = 120 W in SW3 sample; Re = 0.0568 °C/W and RLHP = 0.186 °C/W with lowest amount in SW3 sample; LHPs can start-up at 120 s with the composite wicks; Lower Tew of CW1 and CW2 samples compared to SW3 samples through out the operation, and proximity of the heat transfer coefficients of CW1, CW2, and SW3 at the heat loads from 40 to 80 W; The optimal particle size ranges for CW2 were 48–96 μm for the evaporation layer and 96–180 μm for the transportation layer. | [ |
| Ceramic, steel-nickel, and copper wick | Ammonia | 10–60 | N/A |
Ceramic wick, with the smallest thermal conductivity, showed the lowest heating surface temperature; Ceramic wick had the shortest start-up time against steel-nickel and cooper wick. | [ |
| Plain surface wick, Monolayer wick of the copper sintered particles, Columnar posts wick, Mushroom cap wick | N/A | N/A |
The average measured CHF was qCHF = 29 ± 1.5 W/cm2 for plain surface; The average measured CHF was qCHF = 34.8 ± 1.8 W/cm2 for monolayer wick which is 20% higher than that of the plain surface; The average measured CHF was qCHF = 47.8 ± 2.5 W/cm2 for columnar posts wick which is 65% higher than that of the plain surface; The average measured CHF was qCHF = 54.4 ± 2.8 W/cm2 for mushroom posts wick which is 87% and 14% higher than that of the plain surface and columnar, respectively. | [ | |
| Composite wick-Single and | Water | 20–600 | 0.052 |
Increasing the particle size led to an increase in the dry out; Two-layer wick shows a near-linear increase in wick superheat as the heat flux increases to 130 W/cm2; Sample C provided the best combination of high dry out heat flux and a low boiling resistance; Maximum heat flux dissipation of 485 W/cm2 over a 1 cm2 while also maintaining a low thermal resistance of only 0.052 K. | [ |
| The composite wick of sintered copper powder-mesh | Water | N/A | 0.1 |
The different evaporator and condenser wick structures helped to simultaneously enhance the evaporation and condensation of the working fluid; Thermal resistance of the vapor chamber decreased by more than 37.67%. | [ |
| Composite wick-Single and two-layer wick | Water | N/A | 0.1 |
Although both these two-layer wick designs had low resistance throughout the boiling curve, the single-layer wick was able to dry out to low heat fluxes; 400% increase in dry out heat flux for two-layer wick compared to single-layer wick; The 5 × 5 design has a dry out heat flux of 151 W/cm2 at 0.095 K/W (3.4 times larger than a single-layer wick; The dry out heat flux of the 10 × 10 design was 198 W/cm2 at 0.105 K/W, a 4.4 times enhancement over the baseline. | [ |
| Composite porous wick with | Water | 10–190 | N/A |
The maximum heat load in the composite porous wick from No. 1 to No. 4 is 190 W, 70 W, 110 W, and 90 W, respectively; The composite porous wick with spherical-dendritic copper powders has the largest critical heat flux of 15.1 W/cm2; Increasing the superheat of the evaporator wall by increasing the heat load up to 40 W; Startup time decreased with heat load; The maximum evaporation heat transfer coefficient is 9134.7 W/(m2K) for No. 4 sample. | [ |
| Multi-scale | Ethanol | N/A | N/A |
Improving the modification of copper powders by MCPW increases capillary performance; Powder size and type of powder as the morphologies of copper powders affect capillary function; Nanostructures on the powder surface caused the higher capillary height and rising velocity of working fluid for the wick; The results of capillary height rise fast for acetone compared with the results of water; The capillary performance parameter for irregular MCPW is 27.2% higher than that of the spherical-based sample. | [ |
| Composite wick-Nickel powder with a size of | Water | N/A | N/A |
LHP with a composite wick is found to have a shorter start-up time and lower operation temperature; Higher capillary pressure during the operation of LHPs with proposed composite wick; Less heat leakage of composite wick than sintered pure nickel wick; Effective thermal conductivity is reduced with the addition of copper to the Ni-Cu mixture; Sintered Ni-Cu wicks have a higher ETC in the wet mode compared to the dry mode. | [ |
| Multi-scale | Acetone, ethanol, and water | N/A | N/A |
Provide hydrophilic performance and facilitate the penetration of working fluid into the pores by MCPW; Increased capillary performance was sintered with irregular copper powder and delayed by NaOH solution; Both NSP-1 and NSP-2 show an upward trend, while the height of NSP-1 is lower than that of NSP-2 under the same condition; The prepared NIP samples illustrate larger capillary height than the sintered wicks with irregular powders; NIP-2 performs better than the H2SO4 NIP-1. | [ |
| Striped | Water | 2–8 | 0.3 |
Minimum thermal resistance was 0.26 K/W with a maximum temperature of 74.07 ◦C at an 8 W heating load; The low thermal resistance and the maximum temperature for the UTFHP resulted in a filling ratio of 57%. | [ |
| 3D printed stainless steel wick | Water | 20–160 | 0.2 |
3D-printed wick with high porosity, suitable pore radius, high permeability and low effective thermal conductivity; LHP could start-up and run successfully at a low heat load of 20 W in about 100 s; The highest evaporator wall temperature of the LHP with sample A medium and high heat loads; Temperature oscillations and increase evaporator wall temperature with sample C; The quality of vapor in the LHP with samples A and B was higher than in sample C; Thermal resistance increased at a heat load 60 W in sample A; Increasing the evaporator thermal resistance of sample C due to vapor permeating through the wick; The highest value of the heat transfer coefficient was up to 44.379 W/m2K at a high heat load of 140 W in sample B. | [ |
| 3D-printed stainless steel porous | Water | N/A | N/A |
Increase heat transfer via 3D-printed heat pipe; The important role of the gravitational effect in the wick structure; Enhancement of capillary performance through 3D-printed wick. | [ |