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Subcooling

About: Subcooling is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 6150 publications have been published within this topic receiving 99125 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated condensation heat transfer of a sonic steam jet in subcooled water, and four different steam plume shapes were observed in present test conditions, and condensation regime map was given based on steam mass flux and water temperature.

86 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the idea that there are transition boiling curves accessible to a given liquid boiling on a given surface, is advanced, and a variety of saturated, subcooled, pool, and flow boiling data are shown to be consistent with, and explainable in terms of, the idea.

86 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a first-order analytical model of a hydrothermal-boiling source of harmonic tremor was developed to evaluate the potential of boiling in groundwater flow channels for generating ground vibration associated with volcanic activity.
Abstract: The potential of hydrothermal boiling in groundwater flow channels for generating harmonic tremor (a relatively monochromatic ground vibration associated with volcanic activity) is examined. We use simple “organ pipe” theory of normal-mode fluid vibration and fundamental energy considerations to develop a first-order analytical model of a hydrothermal-boiling source of harmonic tremor. We use this model to estimate order-of-magnitude groundwater flow channel lengths and boiling heat transfer rates required to produce harmonic tremor with dominant frequencies in the range 0.5–5 Hz and surface wave reduced displacements of up to 100 cm2. Depending on groundwater sound speed, flow channel lengths of the order of 1–1000 m are required to produce fluid vibration eigenfrequencies in the range 0.5–5 Hz. The boiling heat transfer rate required to produce tremor with a given surface wave reduced displacement depends on the tremor frequency and on whether saturated boiling or subcooled boiling is the cause of the tremor. Saturated boiling produces groundwater vibration via steam bubble growth, whereas subcooled boiling produces groundwater vibration via steam bubble collapse. We find that subcooled hydrothermal boiling is from 102 to 104 times more efficient than saturated boiling in converting boiling “thermal” power to seismic power. For example, the boiling heat transfer rates required to produce 1-Hz tremor with reduced displacements of up to 100 cm2 via subcooled boiling are generally less than a few thousand megawatts; for saturated boiling, the required boiling heat transfer rates are several orders of magnitude larger than this. The highest values of heat flow reported in the literature for volcanic crater lakes and terrestrial and ocean floor geothermal areas are of the order of 1000 MW. Taking this value as a first-order estimate of an upper limit on possible boiling heat transfer rates in volcanic hydrothermal systems, our results suggest that saturated hydrothermal boiling is capable of generating only low-amplitude harmonic tremor, with surface wave reduced displacements no higher than a few square centimeters. However, subcooled hydrothermal boiling could potentially generate high-amplitude harmonic tremor, with reduced displacements as large as several hundred square centimeters. As a specific application of our model, we evaluate the potential of hydrothermal boiling for generating harmonic tremor at recently active Mount St. Helens and Nevado Del Ruiz volcanoes. We conclude that subcooled boiling likely could have produced the tremor episodes considered at both volcanoes. Saturated boiling also could explain the Nevado Del Ruiz tremor but probably not the more powerful Mount St. Helens tremor.

85 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a quasi-one-dimensional, five-equation, homogeneous, nonequilibrium model has been developed and utilized on a microcomputer to calculate the behavior of flowing, initially subcooled, flashing water systems.

85 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a combined experimental and numerical study is reported of melting of a pure metal inside a vertical rectangular enclosure with natural convection in the liquid and con- ductions in the solid.
Abstract: A combined experimental and numerical study is reported of melting of a pure metal inside a vertical rectangular enclosure with natural convection in the liquid and con­ duction in the solid. The numerical model is successfully verified by conducting a series of experiments covering a wide range of hot and cold wall temperatures. It is found that solid subcooling significantly reduces the melting rate when compared to melting with the solid at the fusion temperature. Because the cooled wall is held below the fusion temperature of the metal, the solid/liquid interface eventually reaches a stationary position. For moderate values of the subcooling parameter the steady-state interface is almost vertical and parallel to the cold wall. Strong subcool­ ing results in an early termination of the melting process, such that natural convec­ tion in the relatively small liquid region cannot fully develop. For moderate subcool­ ing, correlations have been derived for the steady-state volume and heat transfer rates. While many aspects of melting with solid subcooling appear to be similar to ordinary nonmetallic solids, important differences in the local flow structures and heat transfer mechanisms are observed.

85 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023267
2022434
2021310
2020268
2019282
2018287