Publication Date:
2016-08-26
Description:
The purpose of this paper is to present a theoretical analysis of the capillary pumped loop (CPL) performance using different working liquids. CPL is a passive heat transfer device, using no mechanical pump to circulate the working liquid, usually composed of a liquid tank, an evaporator, a condenser, a liquid and a vapor line. Heat load is applied on the external surface of the evaporator, partially transferred to the wick inside. Because of this heat load capillary forces are developed inside the porous structure, due to meniscus formation between liquid and vapor surface of the liquid, causing a pressure oscillation capable to pump the flow out of the evaporator. In this paper CPL performance is evaluated using different working liquids, such as water, ammonia, acetone and freon-134. These have different thermophysical properties such as latent heat, viscosity and density, causing different behavior when used as working liquid. Water was found more stable for higher temperature differences, due to higher latent heat of vaporization, while ammonia could take advantage of its viscosity for small temperature differences.
Keywords:
Other low-carbon energy technologies
Print ISSN:
1748-1317
Electronic ISSN:
1748-1325
Topics:
Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering
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Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision Mechanics
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