Computational nanofluid flow and heat transfer analyses applied to micro-systems
Abstract (Summary)
KOO, JUNE MO Computational Nanofluid Flow and Heat Transfer Analyses Applied to
Micro-systems. (Under the direction of Professor C. Kleinstreuer).
The compactness and high surface-to-volume ratios of microscale liquid flow devices
make them attractive alternatives to conventional flow systems for heat transfer augmentation,
chemical reactor or combustor miniaturization, aerospace technology implementations,
as well as biomedical applications, such as drug delivery, DNA sequencing, and
bio-MEMS, to name a few. While experimental evidence indicates that fluid flow in microchannels,
especially in terms of wall friction and heat transfer performance, differs from
macrochannel flow behavior, laboratory observations are often inconsistent and contradictory.
Some researchers attributed the deviations to unknown microscale effects, which
often turned out to originate from inappropriate approaches to analyze the new phenomena.
Specifically, system parameters were neglected, which are not important on the macroscale
but play important roles in microscale analyses.
The main objectives of the study are to identify important parameters for microscale liquid
flows and nanoparticle suspensions, to find a physically sound way to analyze the new phenomena,
and to provide mathematical models to simulate them.
Scale analysis was found to be a valuable tool to determine which forces become important
on the microscale. With increasing system miniaturization surface forces, such as surface
tension and van der Waals forces, take over the control from body forces like gravity and
pressure. Furthermore, surface roughness, viscous dissipation, and entrance region effects
are very important liquid flow parameters in microscale conduits. In summary, for liquid
flow in microchannels with a characteristic width or height of L ? 10 [µm], the continuum
approach, in conjunction with appropriate closure models, is appropriate to analyze microscale
effects.
Employing the porous medium layer (PML) idea, surface roughness effects on momentumand
heat-transfer in micro-conduits were numerically investigated and verified with experimental
data. The friction factor and Nusselt number either increase or decrease depending
on the PML model parameters, expressed in terms of the relative surface roughness, Darcy
number, Reynolds number, and effective thermal conductivity. Variations in the viscous
dissipation effect were found to increasingly affect the friction factor and Nusselt number
with decreasing system size. Variations in entrance geometry may cause early laminar-toturbulent
transition resulting in higher friction factor values.
When nanoparticles are added to liquid flow systems, scalar transport properties can be
significantly enhanced. Specifically, nanofluids, i.e., dilute suspensions of nanoparticles in
liquids, are used to enhance heat transfer performance or to maximize drug delivery. Focusing
on micro-scale heat transfer, it was found that the particle Brownian motion and
the induced surrounding liquid motion are key mechanisms for the experimentally observed
high increase of the effective thermal conductivity of nanofluids. A new, experimentally
validated effective thermal conductivity model has been developed based on kinetic theory.
The model predicts both the effective thermal conductivity and dynamic viscosity of
nanofluids in terms of nanoparticle concentration, size, density and their interaction potential
as well as the density, thermal capacity and dielectric constant of the base liquid.
Nanofluid flow applications were tested for micro heat-exchangers and a drug delivery sys-
tem. Concerning micro heat-exchangers, it was found that a base fluid of high Prandtl
number together with nanoparticles of high thermal conductivity in a channel of high aspect
ratio, form a desirable combination for optimal performance. In order to minimize
the problem of non-uniform suspensions, the selection of materials for the carrier fluid,
nanoparticles and conduit wall was found to be very important. For example, the dielectric
constants difference should be kept small, and appropriate surface treatment, by creating
either electrostatic or steric forces to maintain enough repulsion potential, should be provided.
In the case of nanotherapeutics, radial diffusion turns out to be the controlling mechanism
for drug delivery. Specifically, the time scale for radial diffusion should be kept small
enough to ensure efficient delivery. A shallow channel design together with a pressure chamber
to switch between drug delivery- and purging-process, is suggested over the alternative
multi-stream design or the fluid-guiding system proposed by others.
Computational Nanofluid Flow and Heat Transfer Analyses Applied to
Micro-systems
by
Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:
School:North Carolina State University
School Location:USA - North Carolina
Source Type:Master's Thesis
Keywords:north carolina state university
ISBN:
Date of Publication: