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Thermal conductivity measurement using modulated photothermal radiometry for nitrate and chloride molten salts.

Authors :
Chung, Ka Man
Feng, Tianshi
Zeng, Jian
Adapa, Sarath Reddy
Zhang, Xintong
Zhao, Andrew Z.
Zhang, Ye
Li, Peiwen
Zhao, Youyang
Garay, Javier E.
Chen, Renkun
Source :
International Journal of Heat & Mass Transfer. Dec2023, Vol. 217, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

• Non-contact technique to handle high-temperature corrosive liquids. • Frequency controlled thermal penetration depth eliminates natural convection. • Front-side sensing and vertical holder orientation minimize salt creeping effect. • Accurate thermal conductivity data obtained for nitrate and chloride salts. • MPR is applicable for in-situ diagnostics of high-temperature thermal system. Molten salts are being used or explored for thermal energy storage and conversion systems in concentrating solar power and nuclear power plants. Thermal conductivity of molten salts is an important thermophysical property dictating the performance and cost of these systems, but its accurate measurement has been challenging, as evidenced by wide scattering of existing data in literature. The corrosive and conducting nature of these fluids also leads to time consuming sample preparation processes of many contact-based measurements. Here, we report the measurement of thermal conductivity of molten salts using a modulated photothermal radiometry (MPR) technique, which is a laser-based, non-contact, frequency-domain method adopted for molten salts for the first time. By unitizing the advantages of front side sensing of frequency-domain measurements and the vertical holder orientation, the technique can minimize the natural convection and salt creeping effects, thus yielding accurate molten salt thermal conductivity. The MPR technique is first calibrated using standard molten materials including paraffin wax and sulfur. It is then applied on measuring pure nitrate salts (NaNO 3 and KNO 3), solar salt (NaNO 3 –KNO 3 mixture), and chloride salt (NaCl–KCl–MgCl 2). The measurement results are compared with data from literature, especially those obtained from laser flash analysis (LFA). Our results demonstrate that the MPR is a convenient and reliable technique of measuring thermal conductivity of molten salts. Accurate thermal conductivity data of molten salts will be valuable in developing the next-generation high-temperature thermal energy storage and conversion systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00179310
Volume :
217
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
International Journal of Heat & Mass Transfer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
173175745
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2023.124652