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Transient boiling of water under exponentially escalating heat inputs. Part II: Flow boiling.

Authors :
Su, Guan-Yu
Bucci, Matteo
McKrell, Thomas
Buongiorno, Jacopo
Source :
International Journal of Heat & Mass Transfer. May2016, Vol. 96, p685-698. 14p.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

This paper presents an investigation of forced convection effects on transient boiling heat transfer of water on plate-type heaters, at atmospheric pressure, under exponentially escalating heat fluxes. It complements the work performed under pool boiling conditions presented in the companion paper (Part I). Infrared (IR) thermometry and high-speed video (HSV) were used to gain insight into the physical phenomena and generate data that can be used for development and validation of accurate models of transient flow boiling heat transfer. Exponential power escalations with periods in the range from 5 to 500 ms, and subcooling of 10, 25 and 75 K were explored. The Reynolds number was varied from 25,000 to 60,000, depending on the subcooling. Single-phase heat transfer, onset of the boiling driven (OBD) heat transfer regime and overshoot (OV) conditions were identified. The experimental data suggest that during the single-phase heat transfer regime, forced convection is the dominant heat transfer mechanism for long periods, whereas transient conduction is more important for short periods. A criterion based on the normalized time scale for turbulent heat transfer is shown to capture all single-phase heat transfer data on a single curve. At a given period, OBD heat flux and wall superheat, as well as OV wall superheat increase with increasing subcooling and increasing Reynolds number. For a given Reynolds number and a given subcooling, they decrease with increasing periods at short periods, when the dominant heat transfer mechanism is transient conduction, whereas they barely change for long periods, as the dominant single-phase heat transfer mechanism is forced convection. Once boiling is fully developed, the heat transfer coefficient is proportional to the wall superheat to the fourth power and increases with increasing subcooling. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00179310
Volume :
96
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
International Journal of Heat & Mass Transfer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
113105852
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2016.01.031