Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1797770 Journal of Magnetism and Magnetic Materials 2016 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We consider a thermomagnetically pumped ferrofluid for heat transfer.•The performance of the thermomagnetic pump is compared to natural convection.•The flow is simulated using a two-phase flow model.•The thermomagnetic driving force improves heat transfer significantly.

The feasibility of using a thermomagnetically pumped ferrofluid to enhance the performance of a natural convection cooling loop is investigated. First, a simplified analytical estimate for the thermomagnetic pumping action is derived, and then design rules for optimal solenoid and ferrofluid are presented. The design rules are used to set up a medium-scale (1 m, 10–1000 W) case study, which is modeled using a previously published and validated model (Aursand et al. [1]). The results show that the thermomagnetic driving force is significant compared to the natural convection driving force, and may in some cases greatly surpass it. The results also indicate that cooling performance can be increased by factors up to 4 and 2 in the single-phase and two-phase regimes, respectively, even when taking into the account the added heat from the solenoid. The performance increases can alternatively be used to obtain a reduction in heat-sink size by up to 75%.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Physics and Astronomy Condensed Matter Physics
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