2010 journal article

Nanofluid convective heat transfer in a parallel-disk system

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HEAT AND MASS TRANSFER, 53(21-22), 4619–4628.

co-author countries: United States of America 🇺🇸
author keywords: Nanofluid; Convective heat transfer; Impinging-jet; Parallel disk; Entropy generation; Wall temperature control
Source: Web Of Science
Added: August 6, 2018

Inherently low thermal conductivities of basic fluids form a primary limitation in high-performance cooling which is an essential requirement for numerous thermal systems and micro-devices. Nanofluids, i.e., dilute suspensions of, say, metal-oxide nanoparticles in a liquid, are a new type of coolants with better heat transfer performances than their pure base fluids alone. Using a new, experimentally validated model for the thermal conductivity of nanofluids, numerical simulations have been executed for alumina-water nanofluid flow with heat transfer between parallel disks. The results indicate that, indeed, nanofluids are promising new coolants when compared to pure water. Specifically, smoother mixture flow fields and temperature distributions can be achieved. More importantly, given a realistic thermal load, the Nusselt number increases with higher nanoparticle volume fraction, smaller nanoparticle diameter, reduced disk-spacing, and, of course, larger inlet Reynolds number, expressed in a novel form as Nu = Nu(Re and Br). Fully-developed flow can be assumed after a critical radial distance, expressed in a correlation Rcrit = fct(Re), has been reached and hence analytic solutions provide good approximations. Nanofluids reduce the system’s total entropy generation rate while hardly increasing the required pumping power for any given Rein. Specifically, minimization of total entropy generation allows for operational and geometric system-optimization in terms of Sgen = fct (Re and δ).