Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
7051967 Experimental Thermal and Fluid Science 2017 20 Pages PDF
Abstract
Jet array impingement heat transfer is investigated for two phase forced convection of water at atmospheric pressure and subcooling of 7 °C with flow rates up to 660 mL/min. A jet array consisting of nine 1 mm jets with 5 mm inter-jet spacing and a 2 mm jet to target spacing was employed to cool a 15 mm by 15 mm heated surface. A linear micro-groove and a radial micro-groove surface were investigated and compared to a flat surface. The results show that the heat transfer performance of the impinging jet is insensitive to Reynolds number for fully developed boiling. A maximum heat transfer coefficient of h = 230 kW/m2 K was achieved with the radial micro-groove surface, transporting a substantial heat flux of 380 W/cm2. This was a 2.3-fold improvement compared with the flat surface. The linear micro-groove surface also performed well, achieving a 2-fold enhancement. Finally, the performance of the jet array impingement onto micro-grooved surfaces is compared with other recent compact water cooled two phase heat exchanger concepts from the recent literature showing comparable thermal performance.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
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