Effective thermal conductivity of fully and partially saturated metal wicks
Abstract
The purpose of the study is threefold: (1) to perform accurate experiments covering a wide range of porosities to determine the effective thermal conductivity of sintered fiber porous metals fully saturated with air, water, and water vapor; (2) to propose correlations for these cases, and to compare these correlations with existing analytical predictions, experimental correlations and data; and (3) to determine the effective thermal conductivity of porous metals partially saturated with water and water vapor, respectively. The experimental apparatus, based on the steady-state method of comparison, is designed and used for determining the effective thermal conductivity. The wicks are made of nickel 200, stainless steel 430, and copper, covering a porosity range 0.30-0.67. Based on the experimental results, a single correlation is derived for predicting the effective thermal conductivity of all wicks fully saturated with air, water, and water vapor. For two partially saturated wick specimens with both high porosity and large matrix thermal conductivity, a liquid-vapor transition zone is observed between the phases, which increases the total combined effective thermal conductivity of the specimen.
- Publication:
-
6th International Heat Transfer Conference, Volume 3
- Pub Date:
- 1978
- Bibcode:
- 1978iht.....3...91K
- Keywords:
-
- Conductive Heat Transfer;
- Metals;
- Performance Prediction;
- Porous Materials;
- Thermal Conductivity;
- Wicks;
- Copper;
- Nickel;
- Saturation;
- Stainless Steels;
- Steady State;
- Water Vapor;
- Fluid Mechanics and Heat Transfer