17 results on '"Ronald J. Sicker"'
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2. Thermocapillary Phenomena and Performance Limitations of a Wickless Heat Pipe in Microgravity
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Akshay Kundan, Joel L. Plawsky, Peter C. Wayner, David F. Chao, Ronald J. Sicker, Brian J. Motil, Tibor Lorik, Louis Chestney, John Eustace, and John Zoldak
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- 2015
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3. Spontaneously oscillating menisci: Maximizing evaporative heat transfer by inducing condensation
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Thao T.T. Nguyen, Joel L. Plawsky, David F. Chao, Ronald J. Sicker, Jiaheng Yu, and Peter C. Wayner
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Materials science ,Marangoni effect ,Oscillation ,Capillary action ,Condensation ,General Engineering ,Disjoining pressure ,Evaporation ,02 engineering and technology ,Mechanics ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Condensed Matter Physics ,01 natural sciences ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,Condensed Matter::Soft Condensed Matter ,Physics::Fluid Dynamics ,Heat flux ,0103 physical sciences ,Heat transfer ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
Understanding the fluid dynamics and the phase change heat transfer process within a thin liquid film is important to improve the performance of many industrial processes like coating or distillation. Studies by our group and other research teams showed that thin liquid films begin to oscillate spontaneously as the heat flux increases. We also found that the oscillation amplitude and frequency increase with increasing heat input. This implies that there is a heat transfer advantage to an oscillating thin film. We developed a numerical model to try and understand if there is an advantage to oscillation and under what conditions that advantage occurs. We found that oscillation can enhance net evaporative heat transfer but only if a short period of condensation exists within each oscillation cycle. Such condensation can be driven by intermolecular forces, capillary forces, Marangoni forces, or combinations of all three as we concluded from recent heat pipe experiments. Condensation increases the liquid film thickness at the contact line, and therefore decreases the disjoining pressure impediment to evaporation. These short condensation periods followed by fast evaporation appear as “spikes” in the liquid film thickness over time. These “spikes” were observed experimentally and mimicked by the simulations. Our calculations also show that the heat transfer efficiency increases with increasing oscillation frequency and amplitude in qualitative agreement with experiments.
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- 2018
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4. The effect of condenser temperature on the performance of the evaporator in a wickless heat pipe performance
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Peter C. Wayner, Joel L. Plawsky, David F. Chao, Thao T.T. Nguyen, Anisha Pawar, Jiaheng Yu, and Ronald J. Sicker
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Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes ,Marangoni effect ,Materials science ,Mechanical Engineering ,Marangoni number ,02 engineering and technology ,Heat transfer coefficient ,Mechanics ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Condensed Matter Physics ,01 natural sciences ,Nusselt number ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,Heat pipe ,0103 physical sciences ,Heat transfer ,0210 nano-technology ,Condenser (heat transfer) ,Evaporator - Abstract
The Constrained Vapor Bubble (CVB), a simple, wickless, heat pipe design that depends on interfacial forces to drive corner flow in a square cuvette, was studied in the microgravity environment aboard the International Space Station (ISS). In this paper, we consider the effects of different condenser temperatures on the heat transfer and fluid flow behavior using pentane as the working fluid. As the condenser temperature was decreased, the performance of the system decreased. This performance decrease using the pure working fluid was opposite to the behavior observed when using a mixture of 94 vol% pentane and 6 vol% isohexane. The mechanism for the decline in performance as the condenser temperature was lowered was a stronger than expected increase in the apparent strength of Marangoni flows at the heater end of the system. A simple mathematical model was fit to the experimental data and used to extract an evaporator heat transfer coefficient for experiments where we held the condenser temperature constant while increasing the heater power and where we held the heater power constant while decreasing the condenser temperature. All the results could be collapsed onto a single Nusselt number vs. Marangoni number curve. In this formulation, the Nusselt number was found to decrease with increasing Marangoni number to the 1/3 power.
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- 2021
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5. Experimental study of the heated contact line region for a pure fluid and binary fluid mixture in microgravity
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Thao T.T. Nguyen, Akshay Kundan, Joel L. Plawsky, David F. Chao, Ronald J. Sicker, and Peter C. Wayner
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Drop (liquid) ,Thermodynamics ,02 engineering and technology ,Mechanics ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Curvature ,01 natural sciences ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Biomaterials ,Pentane ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Heat pipe ,Colloid and Surface Chemistry ,chemistry ,Heat flux ,Mass transfer ,0103 physical sciences ,Fluid dynamics ,0210 nano-technology ,Order of magnitude - Abstract
Understanding the dynamics of phase change heat and mass transfer in the three-phase contact line region is a critical step toward improving the efficiency of phase change processes. Phase change becomes especially complicated when a fluid mixture is used. In this paper, a wickless heat pipe was operated on the International Space Station (ISS) to study the contact line dynamics of a pentane/isohexane mixture. Different interfacial regions were identified, compared, and studied. Using high resolution (50×), interference images, we calculated the curvature gradient of the liquid-vapor interface at the contact line region along the edges of the heat pipe. We found that the curvature gradient in the evaporation region increases with increasing heat flux magnitude and decreasing pentane concentration. The curvature gradient for the mixture case is larger than for the pure pentane case. The difference between the two cases increases as pentane concentration decreases. Our data showed that the curvature gradient profile within the evaporation section is separated into two regions with the boundary between the two corresponding to the location of a thick, liquid, “central drop” region at the point of maximum internal local heat flux. We found that the curvature gradients at the central drop and on the flat surfaces where condensation begins are one order of magnitude smaller than the gradients in the corner meniscus indicating the driving forces for fluid flow are much larger in the corners.
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- 2017
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6. Effects of cooling temperature on heat pipe evaporator performance using an ideal fluid mixture in microgravity
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Akshay Kundan, Thao T.T. Nguyen, David F. Chao, Joel L. Plawsky, Peter C. Wayner, and Ronald J. Sicker
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Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes ,Materials science ,Critical heat flux ,Mechanical Engineering ,General Chemical Engineering ,Aerospace Engineering ,Thermodynamics ,Film temperature ,02 engineering and technology ,Heat transfer coefficient ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,Fin (extended surface) ,Heat pipe ,NTU method ,Nuclear Energy and Engineering ,0103 physical sciences ,Heat transfer ,0210 nano-technology ,Nucleate boiling - Abstract
The effect of cooling temperature on heat pipe performance has generally received little consideration. In this paper, we studied the performance of a Constrained Vapor Bubble (CVB) heat pipe using a liquid mixture of 94 vol%-pentane and 6 vol%-isohexane at different cooling temperatures in the microgravity environment of the International Space Station (ISS). Using a one-dimensional (1-D) heat transfer model developed in our laboratory, the heat transfer coefficient of the evaporator section was calculated and shown to decrease with increasing cooler temperature. Interestingly, the decreasing trend was not the same across the cooler settings studied in the paper. This trend corresponded with the change in the temperature profile along the cuvette. When the cooling temperature went from 0 to 20 °C, the temperature of the cuvette decreased monotonically from the heater end to the cooler end and the heat transfer coefficient decreased slowly from 456 to 401 (W m −2 K −1 ) (at a rate of 2.75 W m −2 K −2 ). However, when the cooling temperature increased from 25 to 35 °C, a minimum point formed in the temperature profile, and the heat transfer coefficient dramatically decreased from 355 to 236 (W m −2 K −1 ) (at a rate of 11.9 W m −2 K −2 ). A similar change in decreasing trend was observed in the pressure gradient and liquid velocity profile. The reduced heat pipe performance at high cooling temperatures was consistent with the reduced evaporation which was indicated by the decreasing internal heat transfer and the increasing liquid film thickness along the cuvette as seen in the surveillance images. The result obtained is important for future heat pipe design because we now have a better understanding of the working temperature ranges of these devices.
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- 2016
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7. Arresting the phenomenon of heater flooding in a wickless heat pipe in microgravity
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Joel L. Plawsky, Peter C. Wayner, David F. Chao, Ronald J. Sicker, Thao T.T. Nguyen, and Akshay Kundan
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Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes ,Marangoni effect ,Materials science ,Meteorology ,Capillary action ,Mechanical Engineering ,Drop (liquid) ,Superheated steam ,General Physics and Astronomy ,02 engineering and technology ,Mechanics ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,Cuvette ,Heat pipe ,0103 physical sciences ,Working fluid ,0210 nano-technology ,Quartz - Abstract
The Constrained Vapor Bubble (CVB) is a transparent, wickless heat pipe experiment carried out in the US Labs of the International Space Station (ISS). Experiments were carried out using the 40 mm CVB, 3 mm× 3 mm in cross-section, pentane as the working fluid, with the power inputs of up to 3 W. Due to the low Bond number (Bo) in microgravity and materials of construction, the CVB system was ideally suited to determine the contribution of the Marangoni forces toward the limiting heat pipe performance, and the transparent quartz shows exactly how that limitation occurs. Previous literature models and experimental temperature and pressure measurements suggested that at high enough temperature gradients, the working fluid should be subjected to enough Marangoni force to force it away from the heater and ultimately, dry out the hot end. The CVB experiment shows that high temperature gradients lead to a totally opposite behavior, i.e., ‘flooding’ of the heated end. Flooding of the heater end is attributed to a competition between Marangoni-induced flow due to high temperature gradients at the heater end and capillary return flow from the cooler. This creates a thick liquid layer in the corner of the cuvette at the heater end. At the point of flow balance, a thick layer of liquid is observed on the flat surface of the quartz cuvette. This is defined as the central drop. The region from the top of the heater end to the central drop is referred to as the interfacial flow region. The interfacial flow region develops at a power input of around 0.7 W, and increases in length to the power input of 2 W. At 2 W, the strength of the Marangoni forces saturate. As a result, the forces in the flooded interfacial region are not able to push the liquid further into the capillary region and a further penetration of liquid down the axis of the heat pipe is arrested. As the power input is increased to nearly 3 W, an increase in the vapor space is observed near the heater end at 3 W. This behavior suggests that the flooding might just be an intermediate stage in reaching the dry-out limitation. The flat quartz surface at the hot end is covered by a wavy thin liquid film due to the interfacial forces. The hot end region closest to the heater is a superheated vapor region that leads to the condensation. This additional observation is discussed in Appendix.
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- 2016
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8. The effect of an ideal fluid mixture on the evaporator performance of a heat pipe in microgravity
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Peter C. Wayner, David F. Chao, Thao T.T. Nguyen, Ronald J. Sicker, Akshay Kundan, and Joel L. Plawsky
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Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes ,Materials science ,Marangoni effect ,Mechanical Engineering ,Bubble ,education ,Evaporation ,Thermodynamics ,02 engineering and technology ,Heat transfer coefficient ,Mechanics ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Condensed Matter Physics ,01 natural sciences ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,Heat pipe ,0103 physical sciences ,Micro-loop heat pipe ,Working fluid ,0210 nano-technology ,Evaporator - Abstract
Previous studies on wickless heat pipes showed that a temperature induced “Marangoni flow” prevents liquid from recirculating to the heater end, and therefore reduces the effectiveness of the heat pipe. Recently, several research groups used a water and alcohol mixture, with a low concentration of alcohol, resulting in better performance of the heat pipe. The alcohol/water combinations were peculiar in that for a certain composition range, the surface tension increases with increasing temperature thereby driving liquid toward the hotter end. It was believed that changing the direction of the Marangoni stress or reducing its magnitude by differential evaporation of an ideal binary mixture would also improve the performance of the heat pipe. For the first time, an ideal fluid mixture of 94 vol%-pentane and 6 vol%-isohexane was used as the working fluid in the Constrained Vapor Bubble (CVB) heat pipe experiment on the International Space Station (ISS). Using a simple heat transfer model developed in our laboratory, an internal heat transfer coefficient in the evaporator section was determined and shown to be almost twice that of the case where pure pentane was used under the same conditions. The Marangoni stress in the mixture was five times lower. Interestingly, reducing the Marangoni stress led to less liquid accumulation near the heater end and surveillance images of the device, taken at the steady state, showed that the bubble gets much closer to the heater end in the mixture case instead of being isolated from the heater by a thick liquid pool as in the pure pentane case. The proximity of the bubble to the heater wall led to more evaporation at the heater end in the mixture case, and therefore a higher heat transfer coefficient. The pressure profile calculated from the Young–Laplace equation supports the observations made from the surveillance images.
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- 2016
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9. Rip currents: A spontaneous heat transfer enhancement mechanism in a wickless heat pipe
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Akshay Kundan, Peter C. Wayner, Jiaheng Yu, Ronald J. Sicker, Thao T.T. Nguyen, Joel L. Plawsky, and David F. Chao
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Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes ,Materials science ,Mechanical Engineering ,Heat transfer enhancement ,02 engineering and technology ,Mechanics ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Condensed Matter Physics ,01 natural sciences ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,Vortex ,Surface tension ,Heat pipe ,0103 physical sciences ,Heat transfer ,Fluid dynamics ,Current (fluid) ,0210 nano-technology ,Rip current - Abstract
The liquid-vapor distribution and its effects on the fluid dynamics and heat transfer occurring within a wickless heat pipe are little understood, especially in a microgravity environment. Such information is vital to the design of thermal management systems for deep space robotic and manned exploration missions, especially if unexpected behaviors arise. We observed an unusual analog of a terrestrial rip current during the operation of a wickless heat pipe on the International Space Station. The current arose spontaneously as the heat input increased, flowing along the flat surfaces of the device toward the heater end, and was driven by a pair of counterrotating vortices that formed from the interaction of opposing surface tension and capillary driven corner flows. The current served as a natural way of increasing the total contact line length within the device and this enabled higher evaporation rates than would have been possible based on the engineered geometry of the device alone.
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- 2020
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10. The Constrained Vapor Bubble Fin Heat Pipe in Microgravity
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Tibor Lorik, Raymond Margie, Peter C. Wayner, Arya Chatterjee, Louis Chestney, Ronald J. Sicker, Joel L. Plawsky, John Zoldak, David F. Chao, and John Eustace
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Chemistry ,business.industry ,General Chemical Engineering ,General Chemistry ,Mechanics ,Curvature ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,Fin (extended surface) ,Pentane ,Cuvette ,Heat pipe ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Optics ,Micro-loop heat pipe ,Meniscus ,Working fluid ,business - Abstract
The Constrained Vapor Bubble (CVB) is a wickless, grooved heat pipe and is the first, full-scale fluids experiment flown on the U.S. module of the International Space Station. The CVB promises to provide new insight into the operation of a heat pipe in space. It is a relatively simple device constructed from a spectrophotometer cuvette and uses pentane as the working fluid. The pentane flows within the corners of the cuvette due to a curvature gradient in the liquid menisci associated with the cuvette corners. The curvature of the liquid interface can be determined by viewing the meniscus through the transparent quartz walls. Extremely accurate temperature and pressure measurements were obtained in addition to the images. In the article, the results from the first two CVB modules—a dry calibration module and a wet heat pipe module—are presented. We show that the axial temperature profiles are significantly different in space. The heat pipes were seen to operate at a higher pressure and higher temperature ...
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- 2011
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11. Constrained Vapor Bubble Experiment for International Space Station: Earth's Gravity Results
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John Eustace, Arya Chatterjee, John Zoldak, Joel L. Plawsky, Tibor Lorik, Peter C. Wayner, Ronald J. Sicker, David F. Chao, and Louis Chestney
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Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes ,Physics ,Convection ,Meteorology ,Vapor pressure ,Mechanical Engineering ,Aerospace Engineering ,Mechanics ,Heat transfer coefficient ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Physics::Fluid Dynamics ,Heat pipe ,Space and Planetary Science ,Thermal radiation ,Heat transfer ,Condenser (heat transfer) ,Space environment - Abstract
The constrained vapor bubble experiment scheduled to fly aboard the International Space Station in the near future promises to give us new insight into the fundamental science of interfacial thermophysics. The evaporating meniscus formed at the corner of the vapor bubble is expected to behave in a significantly different manner in the microgravity environment as compared with the Earth's gravity environment. Since the constrained vapor bubble can also behave as a micro heat pipe, it will additionally help in gaining a technical understanding of the performance of a micro heat pipe in a space environment. Earth-based experiments have been conducted for the past two decades to gain a better knowledge of the rich phenomenon observed in the relatively simple constrained vapor bubble setup. Here, some recent Earth's-gravity-environment-based data obtained on a 30-mm-long constrained vapor bubble have been presented. The data were fitted to a model, and a self-consistent value of the inside heat transfer coefficient was obtained. The external convective and radiative heat transfer coefficients were also determined. These ground-based experiments form a calibration against which the future data from space-based experiments will be compared.
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- 2010
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12. Orders-of-magnitude performance increases in GPU-accelerated correlation of images from the International Space Station
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William V. Meyer, Gregory Chamitoff, Brion J. Au, Jeffrey N. Williams, Edward M. Fincke, Peter J. Lu, Sandra H. Magnus, C. Michael Foale, Hidekazu Oki, Peggy A. Whitson, Leroy Chiao, Daniel M. Tani, Mark Christiansen, William S. Mcarthur, Catherine A. Frey, Ronald J. Sicker, Andrew B. Schofield, and David A. Weitz
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CUDA ,business.industry ,Computer science ,Code (cryptography) ,Parallel algorithm ,Graphics processing unit ,Tracking system ,Image processing ,Central processing unit ,Parallel computing ,SIMD ,business ,Information Systems - Abstract
We implement image correlation, a fundamental component of many real-time imaging and tracking systems, on a graphics processing unit (GPU) using NVIDIA's CUDA platform. We use our code to analyze images of liquid-gas phase separation in a model colloid-polymer system, photographed in the absence of gravity aboard the International Space Station (ISS). Our GPU code is 4,000 times faster than simple MATLAB code performing the same calculation on a central processing unit (CPU), 130 times faster than simple C code, and 30 times faster than optimized C++ code using single-instruction, multiple-data (SIMD) extensions. The speed increases from these parallel algorithms enable us to analyze images downlinked from the ISS in a rapid fashion and send feedback to astronauts on orbit while the experiments are still being run.
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- 2009
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13. Thermocapillary Phenomena and Performance Limitations of a Wickless Heat Pipe in Microgravity
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Akshay Kundan, Louis Chestney, Ronald J. Sicker, Brian J. Motil, John Zoldak, Peter C. Wayner, David F. Chao, John Eustace, Joel L. Plawsky, and Tibor Lorik
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Physics ,Heat pipe ,Marangoni effect ,Capillary action ,Boiling ,education ,Thermal ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Mechanics ,Limiting ,Wetting ,Return flow - Abstract
A counterintuitive, thermocapillary-induced limit to heat- pipe performance was observed that is not predicted by current thermal-fluid models. Heat pipes operate under a number of physical constraints including the capillary, boiling, sonic, and entrainment limits that fundamentally affect their performance. Temperature gradients near the heated end may be high enough to generate significant Marangoni forces that oppose the return flow of liquid from the cold end. These forces are believed to exacerbate dry out conditions and force the capillary limit to be reached prematurely. Using a combination of image and thermal data from experiments conducted on the International Space Station with a transparent heat pipe, we show that in the presence of significant Marangoni forces, dry out is not the initial mechanism limiting performance, but that the physical cause is exactly the opposite behavior: flooding of the hot end with liquid. The observed effect is a consequence of the competition between capillary and Marangoni-induced forces. The temperature signature of flooding is virtually identical to dry out, making diagnosis difficult without direct visual observation of the vapor-liquid interface.
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- 2015
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14. The Constrained Vapor Bubble (CVB) Experiment in the Microgravity Environment of the International Space Station
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Louis Chestney, John Eustace, Peter C. Wayner, David F. Chao, John Zoldak, Ronald J. Sicker, Tibor Lorik, Joel L. Plawsky, and Arya Chatterjee
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Heat pipe ,Gravity (chemistry) ,Meteorology ,Convective heat transfer ,Capillary action ,education ,International Space Station ,Heat losses ,Vapor bubble ,Environmental science ,Mechanics ,Curvature - Abstract
The Constrained Vapor Bubble (CVB) experiment was run in the microgravity environment of the International Space Station as part of the Increment 23-24 which ended in September 2010. Here we present preliminary results which indicate significant differences in the operation of the CVB heat pipe in the micro-gravity environment as compared to the Earth's gravity. The temperature profile data along the heat pipe indicate that the heat pipe behavior is affected favorably by increased capillary flow and adversely by the absence of convective heat transfer as a heat loss mechanism. Image data of the liquid profile in the grooves of the heat pipe indicate that the curvature gradient is considerably different from that on Earth. An initial discussion of the data collected is presented.
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- 2011
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15. The Constrained Vapor Bubble Experiment: Results From the International Space Station
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Louis Chestney, Tibor Lorik, Arya Chatterjee, John Zoldak, John Eustace, Joel L. Plawsky, David F. Chao, Ronald J. Sicker, and Peter C. Wayner
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Convection ,Engineering ,business.industry ,Mechanical engineering ,Mechanics ,Curvature ,Physics::Fluid Dynamics ,Heat pipe ,International Space Station ,Thermal ,Fluid dynamics ,Working fluid ,business ,Space environment - Abstract
The constrained vapor bubble (CVB) experiment is an experiment in thermal fluid science currently operating on the International Space Station. Flown as the first experiment on the Fluids Integrated Rack on the Destiny module of the US part of the space station, the experiment promises to provide new and exciting insights into the working of a wickless micro heat pipe in the micro-gravity environment. The CVB consists of a relatively simple setup — a quartz cuvette with sharp corners partially filled with pentane as the working fluid. Along with temperature and pressure measurements, the curvature of the pentane menisci formed at the corners of the cuvette can be determined using optical measurements. This is the first time the data collected in space environment is being presented to the public. The data shows that, while the performance of the CVB heat pipe is enhanced due to increased fluid flow, the loss of convection as a heat loss mechanism in the space environment, leads to some interesting consequences. We present some significant differences in the operating characteristics of the heat pipe between the space and Earth’s gravity environments and show that this has important ramifications in designing effective radiators for the space environment.
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- 2011
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16. The Constrained Vapor Bubble Experiment for the ISS - Earth's Gravity and Mu Gravity Results
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Arya Chatterjee, John Zoldak, Tibor Lorik, Peter C. Wayner, John Eustace, Louis Chestney, David F. Chao, Ronald J. Sicker, and Joel L. Plawsky
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Physics ,Gravity (chemistry) ,Vapor bubble ,Geophysics ,Geodesy ,Earth (classical element) - Published
- 2010
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17. Microgravity Phase Separation Near the Critical Point in Attractive Colloids
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Salvatore Anzalone, Edward M. Fincke, William V. Meyer, Maria Havenhill, Henry Yee, Richard B. Rogers, Jay Owens, Michael Foale, Amber S. Krauss, Peter J. Lu, Jeffrey N. Williams, Monica I. Hoffmann, William S. Mcarthur, Leroy Chiao, Catherine A. Frey, Ronald J. Sicker, Gregory Funk, and David A. Weitz
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Convection ,business.industry ,Photography ,Observable ,Mars Exploration Program ,Spaceflight ,law.invention ,law ,Critical point (thermodynamics) ,Phase (matter) ,Physics::Space Physics ,International Space Station ,Environmental science ,Aerospace engineering ,business - Abstract
We investigate the phase behavior of mixtures of colloids and polymers near their critical point in a microgravity environment. Astronauts onboard the International Space Station (ISS) are using photography to record the rate of phase separation of six samples near the liquid-gas critical point. These photographs are taken both by an automated photography system (based on EarthKAM hardware and software) and manually by the astronauts who have setup the experiment. We have obtained high-quality photographs of processes that are not observable on Earth, since both sedimentation and convection are negligible onboard the International Space Station. Interestingly, we observe that gravity does not affect the onset of phase separation in colloid-polymer mixtures near the liquid-gas critical point: samples which phase separate on earth also do so onboard the ISS. However, the rates at which this phase separation occurs is affected by several orders of magnitude by gravity, suggesting future avenues for exploration. The understanding of this system is important for both practical earth-bound applications, as well as the development of products and materials that are stable and functional over long periods of time in a lowgravity environment. Thus, our results may assist the long-term spaceflight required for proposed exploration missions to the moon and to Mars.
- Published
- 2007
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