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Critical heat flux in a 0.38 mm microchannel and actions for suppression of flow boiling instabilities
This paper presents experimental results for critical heat flux in a 0.38 mm internal diameter tube during saturated flow boiling. Experiments were performed for refrigerant R134a flowing inside a horizontal stainless steel circular channel of 70 mm heated length, mass velocities ranging from 200 to...
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Published in: | Experimental thermal and fluid science 2015-10, Vol.67, p.48-56 |
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Main Authors: | , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | This paper presents experimental results for critical heat flux in a 0.38 mm internal diameter tube during saturated flow boiling. Experiments were performed for refrigerant R134a flowing inside a horizontal stainless steel circular channel of 70 mm heated length, mass velocities ranging from 200 to 1400 kg/m super(2) s, saturation temperature of 31 [degrees]C and critical heat fluxes up to 215 kW/m super(2). A parametric study of the effect of mass velocity revealed the same trends observed in previous studies with 1.1 and 2.2 mm internal diameter tubes. In contrast, prediction methods that performed well in previous works for internal diameters higher than 1.00 mm failed to predict the data for the 0.38 mm tube. An investigation into the reasons for the failure of these methods revealed thermo-hydraulic instabilities are more pronounced for the 0.38 mm tube and actions to cancel these effects are required. Tests revealed that a saturated inlet vapor quality near 5% combined with a high inlet pressure drop could increase the critical heat flux up to 50% in comparison to the results without any control actions. Moreover, conventional CHF predictive methods from the literature provided a reasonable prediction of the results for the 0.38 mm tube when instability effects were minimized. |
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ISSN: | 0894-1777 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.expthermflusci.2015.02.020 |