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Conjugate heat transfer through nano scale porous media to optimize vacuum insulation panels with lattice Boltzmann methods

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TLDR
A new holistic approach provides a distinct advantage over similar porous media approaches by providing direct control and tuning of particle packing characteristics such as aggregate size, shape and pore size distributions and studying their influence directly on conduction and radiation independently.
Abstract
Due to reduced thermal conductivity, vacuum insulation panels (VIPs) provide significant thermal insulation performance. Our novel vacuum panels operate at reduced pressure and are filled with a powder of precipitated silicic acid to further hinder convection and provide static stability against atmospheric pressure. To obtain an in depth understanding of heat transfer mechanisms, their interactions and their dependencies inside VIPs, detailed microscale simulations are conducted. Particle characteristics for silica are used with a discrete element method (DEM) simulation, using open source software Yade-DEM, to generate a periodic compressed packing of precipitated silicic acid particles. This aggregate packing is then imported into OpenLB (openlb.net) as a fully resolved geometry, and used to study the effects on heat transfer at the microscale. A three dimensional Lattice Boltzmann method (LBM) for conjugated heat transfer is implemented with open source software OpenLB, which is extended to include radiative heat transport. The infrared intensity distribution is solved and coupled with the temperature through the emissivity, absorption and scattering of the studied media using the radiative transfer equation by means of LBM. This new holistic approach provides a distinct advantage over similar porous media approaches by providing direct control and tuning of particle packing characteristics such as aggregate size, shape and pore size distributions and studying their influence directly on conduction and radiation independently. Our aim is to generate one holistic tool which can be used to generate silica geometry and then simulate automatically the thermal conductivity through the generated geometry.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

OpenLB—Open source lattice Boltzmann code

TL;DR: The package presented here aims at providing an open access platform for both, applicants and developers, from academia as well as industry, which facilitates the extension of previous implementations and results to novel fields of application for lattice Boltzmann methods.
Journal ArticleDOI

Total enthalpy-based lattice Boltzmann simulations of melting in paraffin/metal foam composite phase change materials

TL;DR: In this article, a lattice Boltzmann method (LBM) based on the two relaxation time (TRT) collision scheme for the simulation of melting and conjugate heat transfer is proposed, validated and applied to melting in three-dimensional (3D) structures of composite PCM-metal foam latent heat storages.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hybrid conduction, convection and radiation heat transfer simulation in a channel with rectangular cylinder

TL;DR: In this article, the combination effect of thermal radiation and convection in the hybrid heat transfer between solid and fluid in a channel was investigated, and the lattice Boltzmann method based on the D2Q9 scheme has been utilized for modeling fluid and temperature fields.
Journal ArticleDOI

Correlation of pore size distribution with thermal conductivity of precipitated silica and experimental determination of the coupling effect

TL;DR: In this article, the pore size distributions of the samples were measured by mercury intrusion porosimetry and used to calculate the gas thermal conductivity as a function of the residual pressure.
References
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Literature Review of High Performance Thermal Insulation

Axel Berge, +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the properties of aerogels and vacuum insulation panels (VIP) are described more in detail, and the authors propose a solution to decrease the thickness of the building envelope while maintaining the thermal resistance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Approach for predicting effective thermal conductivity of aerogel materials through a modified lattice Boltzmann method

TL;DR: In this article, a modified lattice Boltzmann method (LBM) is established to predict effective thermal conductivity of aerogel materials for insulation performance, and a stochastic generation method based on mesoscopic solid-phase growth principle is adopted.
Journal ArticleDOI

Vacuum Insulation Panels: Analysis of the Thermal Performance of Both Single Panel and Multilayer Boards

TL;DR: In this article, a study on the critical issues related to the laboratory measurement of the equivalent thermal conductivity of VIPs and their performance degradation due to vacuum loss has been carried out utilizing guarded heat flux meter apparatus.
Journal ArticleDOI

Vacuum insulation properties of glass wool and opacified fumed silica under variable pressing load and vacuum level

TL;DR: In this paper, glass wool and opacified fumed silica (OFS) were used as fillers of vacuum insulation panels to evaluate the thermal conductivity at the center of the panel under various vacuum levels and pressing loads.
Journal ArticleDOI

Modelling of the conductive heat transfer through nano-structured porous silica materials

TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed a numerical model for estimating the magnitude of conductive heat transfer inside nano-structured silicas using a realistic representation of their complex porous structure, taking into account the special porous morphology of the materials at both the nanometric and microscopic scale.
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Q1. What contributions have the authors mentioned in the paper "Conjugate heat transfer through nano scale porous media to optimize vacuum insulation panels with lattice boltzmann methods" ?

This aggregate packing is then imported into OpenLB ( openlb. net ) as a fully resolved geometry, and used to study the effects on heat transfer at the microscale. The infrared intensity distribution is solved and coupled with the temperature through the emissivity, absorption and scattering of the studied media using the radiative transfer equation by means of LBM. This new holistic approach provides a distinct advantage over similar porous media approaches by providing direct control and tuning of particle packing characteristics such as aggregate size, shape and pore size distributions and studying their influence directly on conduction and radiation independently. 

At higher pressures, the number of air particles also increases and thus absorption of radiation increases and the heat flux due to radiation decreases slightly. 

The coupling term arises from the increased heat transport bridging between neighboring particles or fibers on the micro-scale and increases as the heat conductivity of the gas and solid increases. 

Since the entire process for generating the geometry is procedural and parameter driven, multiple geometries can be generated based on the same base geometry. 

In order to understand effects of different packing geometries such as porosity and aggregate size on the individual contributions that make up the heat transfer through the VIP, a high fidelity model of the packing geometry is required. 

As the pressure inside the VIP decreases, the heat transfer through the fluid decreases inversely proportional to the Knudsen number in (18) [7,27]. 

(12)Heat transfer through a VIP is composed of the heat transfer through gas λG (convection), through solid λS (conduction), through radiation λR and a coupling term λC . 

The first method generates the geometry based on idealized elementary units or fractal geometry, the second based on inhomogeneous procedurally generated geometry. 

To calculate thermal conductivity as a function of temperature and density the following equation from Zarr et al. [31] holds for the standard material. 

The three dimensional geometry generation method implemented provides a distinct advantage over other porous media approaches by allowing direct control and tuning of particle packing characteristics such as aggregate size, shape and pore size distributions and studying their influence directly on conduction and radiation independently. 

Their holistic approach is composed of two parts, the first generates the silica particle geometry with YADE, the second simulates the effective thermal conductivity through the geometry usingOpenLB 

The effective heat conductivity λeff though the resolved packing is calculated byλeff = qeffL ∆T(14)where L is the cell length,∆T is the temperature difference between the upper (Γt ) and lower boundary (Γb) and the effective heat flux qeff is given byqeff = qs + qf + qr . (15)The heat fluxes for the solid qs and for the fluid qf are calculated by the temperature distribution’s first momentum in (6). 

To confirm grid independence, a simplified geometry, shown in Fig. 6, considering a single sphere between two plates, is used to evaluate the effective thermal conductivity. 

The VIP panels compressed with 25 and 30 bar closely follow the simulations with compression levels 0 and 2 respectively, both with a relative error of 3.7%. 

Rochais et al. [9] also present a method for procedural generation of VIP nanostructure geometry based primarily on the fractal dimension and repetitions of periodic base structures (square-shaped, diamond-shaped, brick-shaped). 

Trending Questions (2)
What are the different methods of heat transfer in a vacuum?

Conjugate heat transfer in vacuum insulation panels involves conduction and radiation. The study integrates Lattice Boltzmann methods to analyze thermal conductivity through nano porous media.

What is the influence of lattice porosity on heat transfer?

The lattice porosity in vacuum insulation panels affects heat transfer by controlling conduction and radiation through tuning particle packing characteristics like size, shape, and pore distributions.