Bubble nucleation was investigated in a 20-mm-long, wickless heat pipe on the International Space Station. Over 20 h of running experiments using pentane as the working fluid, more than 100 nucleation events were observed. Bubble nucleation at the heater end temporarily boosted peak pressures and vapor temperatures in the device. At the moment of nucleation, the heater wall temperature significantly decreased due to increased evaporation and the original vapor bubble collapsed due to increased pressure. A thermal model was developed and using the measured temperatures and pressures, heat transfer coefficients near the heater end of the system were extracted. Peak heat transfer coefficients during the nucleation event were over a factor of three higher than at steady-state. The heat transfer coefficient data were all collapsed in the form of a single, linear correlation relating the Nusselt number to the Ohnesorge number.
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The effect of condenser temperature on the performance of the evaporator in a wickless heat pipe performance
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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- Award ID(s):
- 1637816
- PAR ID:
- 10337411
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer
- Volume:
- 176
- ISSN:
- 0017-9310
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 121484
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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