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An Experimental Study of Small-Diameter Wickless...
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An Experimental Study of Small-Diameter Wickless Heat Pipes Operating in the Temperature Range 200°C to 450°C

Abstract

An experimental investigation is reported for medium-temperature, wickless, small-diameter heat pipes charged with environmentally sound and commercially available working fluids. The wickless heat pipes (thermosyphons) studied have many applications in heat recovery systems since their operational temperature range is between 200°C and 450°C. The heat pipes investigated had an internal diameter of 6 mm and a length of 209 mm. The lengths of evaporator and condenser sections were 50 mm and 100 mm, respectively. The working fluids tested were diphenyl based: Therminol VP1 and Dowtherm A. High-grade stainless steel was chosen as the shell material for the heat pipes to provide chemical compatibility between heat pipe casing material and working fluids at elevated temperatures. Thermal resistances of less than 0.4 K/W have been achieved at working temperatures of up to 420°C with an effective thermal conductivity of 20 kW/m-K, which corresponds to an axial heat flux of 2.5 MW/m2. Even for such small-diameter heat pipes, the experimental data for the evaporator showed good agreement with Rohsenow's pool boiling correlation.

Authors

Jouhara H; Robinson AJ

Volume

30

Pagination

pp. 1041-1048

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Publication Date

November 1, 2009

DOI

10.1080/01457630902921113

Conference proceedings

Heat Transfer Engineering

Issue

13

ISSN

0145-7632

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