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S. Sinkunas

Bio: S. Sinkunas is an academic researcher from Kaunas University of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Heat transfer & Intensity (heat transfer). The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 35 publications receiving 98 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors modeled the unsteady heat and mass transfer of sprayed water in the flue gas using the iterative method of numerical research, and analyzed the combined energy transfer in a semitransparent droplet, also combined heating and evaporation of the droplet.

25 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the experimental investigation of the staggered tube bundle heat transfer to the vertical upward and downward statically stable foam flow was conducted in the laminar regime of foam flow.

18 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the results of an experimental investigation of staggered tube bundle heat transfer to upward and downward moving vertical foam flow are presented in the context of foam type heat exchangers.
Abstract: The results of an experimental investigation of staggered tube bundle heat transfer to upward and downward moving vertical foam flow are presented in this article. It was determined that a dependency exists between tube bundle heat transfer intensity on foam volumetric void fraction, foam flow velocity and direction, and liquid drainage from foam. In addition to this, the influence of tube position of the bundle on heat transfer was investigated. Experimental results were summarized by criterion equations, which can be applied in the design of foam type heat exchangers.

9 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This survey, although extensive cannot include every paper; some selection is necessary, is intended to encompass the English language heat transfer papers published in 2003, including some translations of foreign language papers.

106 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Aug 2013-Langmuir
TL;DR: A very good agreement between theory and experimental data has been found for the first stage of evaporation, and for the second stage for concentrations above CWC; however, some deviations were found for concentrations below CWC.
Abstract: The simultaneous spreading and evaporation of droplets of aqueous trisiloxane (superspreader) solutions onto a hydrophobic substrate has been studied both experimentally, using a video-microscopy technique, and theoretically. The experiments have been carried out over a wide range of surfactant concentration, temperature, and relative humidity. Similar to pure liquids, four different stages have been observed: the initial one corresponds to spreading until the contact angle, θ, reaches the value of the static advancing contact angle, θad. Duration of this stage is rather short, and the evaporation during this stage can be neglected. The evaporation is essential during the next three stages. The next stage after the spreading, which is referred to herein as the first stage, takes place at constant perimeter and ends when θ reaches the static receding contact angle, θr. During the next, second stage, the perimeter decreases at constant contact angle θ = θr for surfactant concentration above the critical wetting concentration (CWC). The static receding contact angle decreases during the second stage for concentrations below CWC because the concentration increases due to the evaporation. During the final stage both the perimeter and the contact angle decrease. In what follows, we consider only the longest stages I and II. The developed theory predicts universal curves for the contact angle dependency on time during the first stage, and for the droplet perimeter on time during the second stage. A very good agreement between theory and experimental data has been found for the first stage of evaporation, and for the second stage for concentrations above CWC; however, some deviations were found for concentrations below CWC.

89 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that if thermodynamics is augmented with Derjaguin's (disjoining/conjoining) pressure to handle phenomena in a vicinity of the three-phase contact line, problems like the singularity of the evaporation flux and of the viscous stress at the three phase contact line of a sessile droplet are ruled out.
Abstract: The evaporation of single droplets and sprays into gaseous atmosphere and the evaporation of sessile liquid droplets on solid substrates are here considered. We argue that if thermodynamics is augmented with Derjaguin’s (disjoining/conjoining) pressure to handle phenomena in a vicinity of the three-phase contact line, problems like the singularity of the evaporation flux and of the viscous stress at the three-phase contact line of a sessile droplet are ruled out.

65 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of the inlet dimension, inlet flow rates, surface tension, and surface structuring on the wettability, average velocity, and film thickness are studied systematically.
Abstract: Flow characteristics of a liquid film flowing over a smooth surface and structured surface with the Reynolds number range from 10 to 1121 are studied. The mixture of R21 and R114 refrigerants is used as the test liquid. The 3D transient simulations are taken to capture the liquid film’s dynamic characteristics and spatial distribution. Effects of the inlet dimension, inlet flow rates, surface tension, and surface structuring on the wettability, average velocity, and film thickness are studied systematically. The obtained results show that surface tension is essential for an accurate simulation, while inlet width has no effect on the liquid film parameters in the steady-state flow regime. For low flow rates, wetting area and film thickness both are small, and a suggested range of Reynolds number is chosen to simulate further heat transfer in order to balance the film thickness and dry spots generation. It is shown that a ripple surface structure hinders the liquid film movement, reflected in a lower velocity and a larger film thickness compared to the smooth surface. Lateral movement of a liquid film can also be observed at the structured surface.

28 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors modeled the unsteady heat and mass transfer of sprayed water in the flue gas using the iterative method of numerical research, and analyzed the combined energy transfer in a semitransparent droplet, also combined heating and evaporation of the droplet.

25 citations