首页> 外文会议>American Society of Mechanical Engineers(ASME) Summer Heat Transfer Conference(HT2005) vol.2; 20050717-22; San Francisco,CA(UA) >MEASUREMENT OF THE THICKNESS OF THE LIQUID MICROLAYER BETWEEN A SLIDING BUBBLE AND A HEATED WALL
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MEASUREMENT OF THE THICKNESS OF THE LIQUID MICROLAYER BETWEEN A SLIDING BUBBLE AND A HEATED WALL

机译:滑动气泡和加热壁之间液体微层厚度的测量

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A laser-based method has been developed to measure the thickness of the liquid microlayer between a cap-shaped sliding bubble and an inclined heated wall. Sliding vapor bubbles are known to create high heat transfer coefficients along the surfaces against which they slide. The details of this process remain unclear and depend on the evolution of the microlayer that forms between the bubble and the surface. Past experiments have used heat transfer measurements on uniform-heat-generation surfaces to infer the microlayer thickness through an energy balance. These studies have produced measurements of 20 to 100 μm for refrigerants and for water, but they have yet to be confirmed by a direct measurement that does not depend on a first-law closure. The results presented here are direct measurements of the microlayer thickness made from a reflectance-based fiber-optic laser probe. Details of the construction and calibration of the probe are presented. Data for saturated FC-87 and a uniform-temperature surface inclined at 2° to 15° from the horizontal are reported. Millimeter-sized spherical bubbles of FC-87 vapor are injected near the lower end of a uniformly heated aluminum plate. The bubbles grow rapidly and change from a spherical to an elliptical shape and finally to a cap-shape with a large section of the bubble surface sliding along the microlayer adjacent to the wall. This evolution is captured by high-speed (1000 frames/sec) images in plan and side views. These image sequences allow measurements of bubble speed, acceleration, and size, but they do not attempt to resolve the microlayer itself. The laser probe yielded microlayer thicknesses of 22 to 55 microns for the cap-shaped bubbles. Bubble Reynolds numbers range from 600 to 4800, Froude numbers are from 0.9 to 1.7, and Weber numbers are from 2.6 to 47.
机译:已经开发出一种基于激光的方法来测量帽形滑动气泡和倾斜的加热壁之间的液体微层的厚度。已知滑动的气泡会沿着其滑动的表面产生较高的传热系数。这个过程的细节仍然不清楚,并且取决于气泡和表面之间形成的微层的演变。过去的实验已经在均匀发热的表面上使用了传热测量,以通过能量平衡来推断微层的厚度。这些研究对制冷剂和水的测量结果为20至100μm,但尚未通过不依赖于第一法律法规的直接测量加以证实。此处显示的结果是对基于反射率的光纤激光探针制成的微层厚度的直接测量。介绍了探头的构造和校准的详细信息。报告了饱和FC-87和与水平面成2°至15°倾斜的均匀温度表面的数据。在均匀加热的铝板下端附近注入FC-87蒸气的毫米大小的球形气泡。气泡迅速生长并从球形变为椭圆形,最后变为帽形,气泡表面的大部分沿与壁相邻的微层滑动。平面图和侧视图中的高速(1000帧/秒)图像捕获了这种演变。这些图像序列允许测量气泡速度,加速度和大小,但它们并未尝试解析微层本身。激光探针产生的帽状气泡的微层厚度为22至55微米。气泡雷诺数从600到4800,弗洛德数从0.9到1.7,韦伯数从2.6到47。

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