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Journal ArticleDOI

An Experimental Investigation of the Thermally Induced Flow Oscillations in Two-Phase Systems

01 Nov 1976-Journal of Heat Transfer-transactions of The Asme (American Society of Mechanical Engineers)-Vol. 98, Iss: 4, pp 616-622
TL;DR: In this article, an experimental study on the onset of thermally induced two-phase flow oscillations has been carried out in a uniformly heated boiling channel using Freon-113 as the operating fluid.
Abstract: An experimental study on the onset of thermally induced two-phase flow oscillations has been carried out in a uniformly heated boiling channel using Freon-113 as the operating fluid. The effects of inlet subcooling, system pressure, inlet and exit restrictions, and inlet velocity have been studied. The experimental data have been compared with the equilibrium as well as the nonequilibrium theory including the effect of subcooled boiling. It has been found that the effect of thermal nonequilibrium should be included in a theoretical model for accurate prediction of the onset and the frequency of thermally induced flow oscillations. A simplified stability criterion has also been presented and compared with the experimental data.
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The most popular models to predict the two-phase flow dynamic instabilities, namely the homogenous flow model and the drift-flux models are clarified with the solution examples and the validation of the model results with experimental findings are also provided.
Abstract: The earliest research in the field of two-phase flow was conducted by Lorentz (1909) The studies on the analysis of two-phase flow instabilities by Ledinegg (1938) created considerable interest concerning the phenomenon of thermally induced flow instability in two-phase flow systems The objective of this review is to sum up the experimental and theoretical work carried out by various investigators over a period of several years, demonstrating and explaining three main instability modes of two-phase flow dynamic instabilities, namely, density-wave type, pressure-drop type and thermal oscillations, encountered in various boiling flow channel systems The typical experimental investigations of these instabilities in tube boiling systems are indicated and the most popular models to predict the two-phase flow dynamic instabilities, namely the homogenous flow model and the drift-flux models are clarified with the solution examples and the validation of the model results with experimental findings are also provided

378 citations


Cites background from "An Experimental Investigation of th..."

  • ...[57] included the effect of thermal non-equilibrium between the phases in the stability analysis of a heated boiling channel by introducing a constitutive equation for the mass rate of vapor from a steady-state energy consideration....

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  • ...[57] carried out an experimental study on the onset of density-wave oscillations using a uniformly heated boiling channel....

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a wide range of pulsating heat pipes is experimentally studied and the influence of gravity and number of turns on the performance of closed loop pulsing heat pipes (CLPHPs) is analyzed.
Abstract: Closed loop pulsating heat pipes (CLPHPs) are complex heat transfer devices having a strong thermo-hydrodynamic coupling governing the thermal performance. In this paper, a wide range of pulsating heat pipes is experimentally studied thereby providing vital information on the parameter dependency of their thermal performance. The influence characterization has been done for the variation of internal diameter, number of turns, working fluid and inclination angle (from vertical bottom heat mode to horizontal orientation mode) of the device. CLPHPs are made of copper tubes of internal diameters 2.0 and 1.0 mm, heated by constant temperature water bath and cooled by constant temperature water–ethylene glycol mixture (50% each by volume). The number of turns in the evaporator is varied from 5 to 23. The working fluids employed are water, ethanol and R-123. The results indicate a strong influence of gravity and number of turns on the performance. The thermophysical properties of working fluids affect the performance which also strongly depends on the boundary conditions of PHP operation. Part B of this paper, which deals with development of semi-empirical correlations to fit the data reported here coupled with some critical visualization results, will appear separately.

352 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An updated review of two-phase flow instabilities including experimental and analytical results regarding density-wave and pressure-drop oscillations, as well as Ledinegg excursions, is presented in this article.
Abstract: An updated review of two-phase flow instabilities including experimental and analytical results regarding density-wave and pressure-drop oscillations, as well as Ledinegg excursions, is presented. The latest findings about the main mechanisms involved in the occurrence of these phenomena are introduced. This work complements previous reviews, putting all two-phase flow instabilities in the same context and updating the information including coherently the data accumulated in recent years. The review is concluded with a discussion of the current research state and recommendations for future works.

292 citations


Additional excerpts

  • ...[139]; Saha and Zuber [140]....

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a two-phase closed loop Pulsating Heat Pipe (CLPHP) is constructed with a capillary tube (ID = 2.0 mm) having no internal wick structure.
Abstract: A Closed Loop Pulsating Heat Pipe (CLPHP) is a complex heat transfer device with a strong thermo-hydrodynamic coupling governing its thermal performance. To better understand its operational characteristics, a two-phase loop is constructed with a capillary tube (ID = 2.0 mm) having no internal wick structure. The loop is heated at one end and cooled at the other and partially made up of glass to assist visualization. The working fluid employed is ethanol. It is concluded from the study that a two-phase loop does represent the thermo-fluidic characteristics of a multi-turn CLPHP. Dynamic two-phase instabilities are present in a two-phase loop also; although the number of turns in a CLPHP increases the level of internal perturbations. The existence of an optimum number of turns for a given heat throughput requirement is explained. Also, it is shown that classical thermodynamics based on quasi-equilibrium theory seems not to be sufficient for complete system analysis. The performance (i.e., overall thermal resistance) is strongly dependent on the flow pattern existing inside the tubes. The role of gravity in the operation characteristics is clarified.

216 citations


Cites background from "An Experimental Investigation of th..."

  • ...[10] leads equilibrium phase change number defined as,...

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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the boiling heat transfer of R-134a flow in horizontal small-diameter tubes with inner diameter of 0.51, 1.12, and 3.1mm was experimentally investigated.
Abstract: The boiling heat transfer of refrigerant R-134a flow in horizontal small-diameter tubes with inner diameter of 0.51, 1.12, and 3.1 mm was experimentally investigated. Local heat transfer coefficient and pressure drop were measured for a heat flux ranging from 5 to 39 kW/m 2 , mass flux from 150 to 450 kg/m 2 s, evaporating temperature from 278.15 to 288.15 K, and inlet vapor quality from 0 to 0.2. Flow patterns were observed by using a high-speed video camera through a sight glass at the entrance of an evaporator. Results showed that with decreasing tube diameter, the local heat transfer coefficient starts decreasing at lower vapor quality. Although the effect of mass flux on the local heat transfer coefficient decreased with decreasing tube diameter, the effect of heat flux was strong in all three tubes. The measured pressure drop for the 3.1-mm-ID tube agreed well with that predicted by the Lockhart–Martinelli correlation, but when the inner tube diameter was 0.51 mm, the measured pressure drop agreed well with that predicted by the homogenous pressure drop model. With decreasing tube diameter, the flow inside a tube approached homogeneous flow. The contribution of forced convective evaporation to the boiling heat transfer decreases with decreasing the inner tube diameter.

213 citations


Cites background from "An Experimental Investigation of th..."

  • ...The time period of the density wave type oscillation was on the order of the transit time, that is, the time for density waves to travel between two ends of a channel [22–24]....

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