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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Identification of the Dominant Heat Transfer Mechanisms during Confined Two-phase Jet Impingement

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors used the dielectric liquid HFE-7100 as the working fluid for both single-phase and two-phase heat transfer in confined jet impingement.
Abstract
Two-phase jet impingement is a compact cooling technology capable of dissipating the large heat fluxes required for thermal management of high-power electronics devices. It is important to understand the primary heat transfer mechanisms that occur during regimes of jet impingement for which boiling occurs, specifically in the confined impingement geometries common to electronics cooling applications. In this study, heat transfer from a surface is experimentally characterized in both confined jet impingement and pool boiling configurations. The dielectric liquid HFE-7100 is used as the working fluid. For the impingement configuration, the jet issues through a single orifice with a diameter of 2 mm, at exit velocities of 1 m/s and 3.33 m/s, into a confinement gap with an orifice-to-target spacing ratio of 3. Additional orifice-to-target spacings of 0.5 and 5 times the jet diameter are tested at the lower jet velocity. The heat flux applied at the surface was increased in steps to characterize the single-phase and two-phase heat transfer performance; all experiments were carried through to critical heat flux conditions. Over the range of velocities and orifice-to-target spacings tested, the jet impingement data in the fully boiling regime coincide with the pool boiling data. This result indicates, for the range of parameters considered in this study, that nucleate boiling is the dominant heat transfer mechanism in the fully boiling regime in confined jet impingement. The impinging jet velocity and orifice-to-target spacing only influence the single-phase heat transfer and critical heat flux.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Pool Boiling Heat Transfer From Enhanced Surfaces to Dielectric Fluids

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used a 15.8 mm o.d. plain copper tube and three copper enhanced surfaces: a Union Carbide High Flux surface, a Hitachi Thermoexcell-E surface and a Wieland Gewa-T surface.
Journal ArticleDOI

Local jet impingement boiling heat transfer

TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on the fundamental issues that influence boiling heat transfer to a free-surface, planar jet of water and present local boiling curves at several streamwise distances from the stagnation line, while streamwise distributions of the surface temperature and convection coefficient.
Journal ArticleDOI

Jet impingement nucleate boiling

TL;DR: In this paper, the characterististics of nucleate boiling with jet impingement were investigated, including the effects of velocity, subcooling, flow direction and surface condition on fully developed boiling and on the correspondence of the extrapolation of pool boiling with developed jet boiling.
Journal ArticleDOI

Critical heat flux from a simulated chip to a confined rectangular impinging jet of dielectric liquid

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate boiling heat transfer from a smooth 12.7 mm × 12. 7 mm heat source to a jet of dielectric Fluorinert FC-72 liquid issued from a thin rectangular orifice into a channel confined between the surfaces of the heat source and the nozzle.
Journal ArticleDOI

Study of the Mechanism of Burn-Out in Boiling System of High Burn-Out Heat Flux

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied the burnout phenomenon in the saturated nucleate boiling of water at atmospheric pressure on a horizontal 10mm dia. copper heated surface, where a small liquid jet was used to cause a forced collapse of the vapor masses generated periodically on the heated surface.
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