Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
648236 | Applied Thermal Engineering | 2010 | 6 Pages |
This study examines the effect of particle size, temperature, and weight fraction on the thermal conductivity ratio of alumina(Al2O3)/water nanofluids. A Al2O3/water nanofluid produced by the direct synthesis method served as the experimental sample, and nanoparticles, each of a different nominal diameter (20, 50, and 100 nm), were dispersed into four different concentrations (0.5, 1.0, 1.5, and 2.0 wt%). This experiment measured the thermal conductivity of nanofluids with different particle sizes, weight fractions, and working temperatures (10, 30, 50 °C). The results showed a correlation between high thermal conductivity ratios and enhanced sensitivity, and small nanoparticle size and higher temperature. This research utilized experimental data to construct a new empirical equation, taking the nanoparticle size, temperature, and lower weight fraction of the nanofluid into consideration. Comparing the regression results with the experimental values, the margin of error was within −3.5% to +2.7%. The proposed empirical equation showed reasonably good agreement with our experimental results.