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Periodic structures for melting enhancement

Authors :
Chunrong Zhao
Michael Opolot
Ming Liu
Ji Wang
Frank Bruno
Simone Mancin
Kamel Hooman
Zhao, Chunrong
Opolot, Michael
Liu, Ming
Wang, Ji
Bruno, Frank
Mancin, Simone
Hooman, Kamel
Source :
International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, 195
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The use of metallic periodic structures was considered for melting rate enhancement of a phase change material (PCM) contained in a rectangular enclosure isothermally heated from the side. The critical (optimized) cell size, or pore size, of a periodic structure with fixed porosity, realising the shortest melting time by maximizing the convection and conduction heat transfer rate into the PCM, was studied. Furthermore, the effects of material properties (copper, aluminium, nickel, and stainless steel), enclosure length, wall-melting temperature difference and porosity were numerically investigated. It was observed that increasing porosity and/or reducing thermal conductivity enlarged the critical cell size (i.e. the optimal cell size that minimizes the melting time). The critical PPIs (pores per inch) of copper and aluminium periodic structures for all studied porosities were 10; for nickel, the critical values were 10 PPIs for porosity values of 0.75, 0.8 and 0.85 while it reduces to 5 PPI for the highest porosity considered here being 0.95. Interestingly, showing a different trend, the critical PPI of stainless-steel structures was 5 for the lowest porosity (0.75) and reduced to 3 for higher porosities. The results clearly demonstrated localised melting which was observed in all periodic structures except for the 10 PPI stainless-steel case. Scattered melting islands are observed as opposed to a moving interface when ϕ=(dp/L)αligament/αPCM>1. For such cases, localized melting occurs and the PCM is melted at the ligaments away from the heated wall before the melt front reaches those ligaments.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00179310
Volume :
195
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....068d2d5e198f417aa2557c908531e1a0