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                                       Details for article 2 of 5 found articles
 
 
  HYSTERESIS PHENOMENA IN SUBCOOLED FLOW BOILING OF WELL-WETTING FLUIDS
 
 
Title: HYSTERESIS PHENOMENA IN SUBCOOLED FLOW BOILING OF WELL-WETTING FLUIDS
Author: Celata, G. R.
Cumo, M.
Setaro, T.
Appeared in: Experimental heat transfer
Paging: Volume 5 (1992) nr. 4 pages 253-275
Year: 1992-10-01
Contents: Detailed knowledge of the physical phenomena involved in subcooled boiling is of great interest for the design of liquid-cooled heat-generating systems with high heat fluxes. An electrically heated stainless steel tube, 2.3 m long, with a 7.57-mm inner diameter, was used to study the incipience of flow boiling in subcooled, well-wetting fluids (R-12 and R-114) over a wide range of pressure, mass flux, and heat flux. Hysteresis in boiling observed by increasing and decreasing heat flux seems to be ascribed to the small contact angle of refrigerants on surfaces such as stainless steel, allowing the larger cavities in the wall to be flooded. A higher temperature excess may be reached in the wall before boiling sets in than the temperature achieved when boiling has developed. Some existing correlations were tested, revealing the general inadequacy in predicting the higher superheating required in well-wetting fluids for the onset of nucleate boiling. Classic theory on bubble growth, heat transfer relationships, and the force balance equation at the bubble-liquid interface, coupled with an empirical correlation for the determination of the boiling incipience conditions, accomplish a very successful prediction of the experimental data.
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Source file: Elektronische Wetenschappelijke Tijdschriften
 
 

                             Details for article 2 of 5 found articles
 
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