Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
652786 | Experimental Thermal and Fluid Science | 2006 | 10 Pages |
A series of tests have been performed to determine the saturated critical heat flux (CHF) in 0.5 and 0.8 mm internal diameter microchannel tubes as a function of refrigerant mass velocity, heated length, saturation temperature and inlet liquid subcooling. The tested refrigerants were R-134a and R-245fa and the heated length of microchannel was varied between 20 and 70 mm. The results show a strong dependence of CHF on mass velocity, heated length and microchannel diameter but no influence of liquid subcooling (2–15 °C) was observed. The experimental results have been compared to the well-known CHF single-channel correlation of Y. Katto and H. Ohno [An improved version of the generalized correlation of critical heat flux for the forced convective boiling in uniformly heated vertical tubes, Int. J. Heat and Mass Transfer 27 (9) (1984) 1641–1648] and the multichannel correlation of W. Qu and I. Mudawar [Measurement and correlation of critical heat flux in two-phase microchannel heat sinks, Int. J. Heat and Mass Transfer 47 (2004) 2045–2059]. The comparison shows that the correlation of Katto–Ohno predicts microchannel data with a mean absolute error of 32.8% with only 41.2% of the data falling within a ±15% error band. The correlation of Qu and Mudawar shows the same trends as the CHF data but significantly overpredicts them. Based on the present experimental data, a new microscale version of the Katto–Ohno correlation for the prediction of CHF during saturated boiling in microchannels has been proposed.