Ultra Fast Spray Cooling and Critical Droplet Daimeter Estimation from Cooling Rate

HTML  Download Download as PDF (Size: 710KB)  PP. 259-270  
DOI: 10.4236/jpee.2014.24037    6,586 Downloads   7,951 Views  Citations

ABSTRACT

Spray cooling is an effective tool to dissipate high heat fluxes from hot surfaces. This paper thoroughly investigates the effects of spray parameters on the cooling time and cooling rate under varying inlet pressure using water as the coolant. Cylindrical samples of stainless steel with constant diameter, D = 25 mm, and thickness δ: 8.5 mm, 13 mm, 17.5 mm and 22 mm were investigated. Critical droplet diameter to achieve an ultrafast cooling rate of 300°C/s was estimated by using analytical model for samples of varying thickness. At an inlet pressure of 0.8 MPa, maximum cooling rates of 424.2°C/s, 502.81°C/s and 573.1°C/s were achieved for wall super heat ΔT = 600°C, 700°C and 800°C respectively.

Share and Cite:

Aamir, M. , Qiang, L. , Xun, Z. , Hong, W. and Zubair, M. (2014) Ultra Fast Spray Cooling and Critical Droplet Daimeter Estimation from Cooling Rate. Journal of Power and Energy Engineering, 2, 259-270. doi: 10.4236/jpee.2014.24037.

Copyright © 2024 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.