Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
13443728 International Journal of Thermal Sciences 2020 14 Pages PDF
Abstract
Textured superhydrophobic surfaces (TSS) are purported to reduce flow friction in microchannels due to velocity slip at liquid-gas interface. At the same time, the liquid-gas interface inhibits heat transfer in textured microchannels due to the low thermal conductivity of entrapped gas phase. Despite significant understanding on fluid flow and thermal transport on the TSS, the interplay of texture shape and arrangement on thermo-hydraulic performance has not been investigated in detail hitherto. To this end, we have numerically investigated the pressure-driven flow through textured microchannels with an aim to enhance the thermo-hydraulic performance. The effective slip length and temperature jump length were estimated as a function of flow and geometry parameters for three types of micropillar shapes viz., square, triangular and herringbone, decorated in microchannels in regular and staggered manner. Scaling relations for the effective slip length and temperature jump length have been shown to be valid for triangular and herringbone shaped micropillars at different flow and geometry related parameters. Herringbone shaped micropillars exhibit more flow friction and allow a significant heat transfer in microchannels within the parameter range investigated, followed by triangular and square shaped micropillars. Although the arrangement of textures in microchannels was found to affect the flow friction substantially, its effect on heat transfer was found to be marginal. Subsequently, the overall thermo-hydraulic performance was observed to be superior in regularly arranged herringbone shaped micropillars, at moderate to high constriction ratios (a ratio of texture pitch to half channel height) and high Peclet numbers over the other texture shapes. The results presented in this work would serve as a useful guide to attain maximum thermo-hydraulic performance in textured microchannels.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
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