Towards the Correct Measurement of Thermal Conductivity of Ionic Melts and Nanofluids †
Abstract
:1. Introduction
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- Unsteady state or transient methods, in which the full Equation (4) is used and the principal measurement is the temporal history of the fluid temperature (transient hot-wire, transient hot strip, the interferometric technique adapted to states near the critical point etc.);
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- Steady state techniques, for which and the equation reduces to , which can be integrated for a given geometry (parallel plates, concentric cylinders, etc.).
- Change of needs—From laboratory work to in-situ measurements,
- Change of paradigm—Fit for purpose instead of best uncertainty,
- Change of financing priorities from state funding agencies—priority to industry driven/sponsored research,
- Decrease for users in industry of the added value of property data of good quality,
- The use and misuse of commercial equipment’s, with methods of measurement not adequate to the object systems.
2. Methods of Measuring Thermal Conductivity of Ionic Melts and Nanofluids
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- The transient hot wire technique was identified as the best technique for obtaining standard reference data (certification of reference materials).
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- It is an absolute technique, with a working equation and a complete set of corrections reflecting the departure from the ideal model, where the principal variables are measured with a high degree of accuracy. It is accepted by the scientific community as a primary method, the top of the traceability chain for this physical quantity.
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- The liquids proposed by IUPAC (toluene, benzene, and water) as primary standards for the measurement of thermal conductivity were measured with this technique with an accuracy of 1% or better.
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- It has been extended, from its original version, to its application at high temperatures (correction for radiation effects), for conducting liquids and melts.
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- High temperature measurements (molten salts).
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- Radiation must be corrected or minimized, and convection eliminated.
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- Electrical insulation of measuring probes indispensable.
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- Use of current commercial instrumentation, such as transient hot-probes and transient hot-strips/disks, based on adaptations of the heat source immersed in the fluid exact behaviour, sacrifice accuracy at the cost of instrumentation and ease of handling of probes and samples. The accountability of methods must be proven.
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- Many of the results presented in the bibliography were taken with commercial instrumentation, and not properly validated.
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- In the limited context of hot wire, for instance, it is common to use just one wire, sometimes shorter than the model requires (end effects), which directly affects the accuracy of the measurements.
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- The contact between the bare metallic wire and the conducting liquid provides a secondary path for the flow of current in the cell and the heat generation in the wire cannot be defined unambiguously.
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- Polarization of the liquid occurs at the surface of the wire, producing an electrical double-layer.
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- The electrical measuring system (an automatic Wheatstone bridge) that detects the changes in the voltage signals in the wire is affected by the combined resistance /capacitance effect, caused by the dual path conduction.
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- Insulated wires (necessity to cover the wire with materials or insulating anodizing coatings to protect it during the measurements) or polarized techniques are required [11].
3. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Method | Type | Attainable Uncertainty 1 | Applicability to Ionic Melts | Applicability to Nanofluids | ||||
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Yes | No | Remarks | Yes | No | Remarks | |||
Transient hot-wire for conducting liquids 2 | Primary | 1% | ✓ | The best method to be applied with classical designs | ✓ | The best method to be applied with classical designs | ||
Transient hot-wire (bare wires) | Primary | 1% | ✓ | ✓ | Non-conducting base fluids and/or nanoparticles | |||
Transient hot strip for conducting liquids (insulated strip) | Primary/Secondary | 2–3% | ✓ | Can be considered primary if the 3D heat transfer equation is solved for the geometries involved | ✓ | Can be considered primary if the 3D heat transfer equation is solved for the geometries involved | ||
Transient Plane Source or Hot-Disk | Secondary | 3–5% | ✓ | Limited in temperature range | ✓ | Limited in temperature range | ||
Steady-state Parallel Plates (Guarded Hot-Plates) | Secondary | 2–3% | ✓ | ✓ | Small spacing between plates might induce phase separation | |||
Steady-state Concentric Cylinders | Secondary | 2–3% | ✓ | Small gaps. Guarded plates | ✓ | Small gaps must be used. | ||
Laser Flash | Secondary | 3–5% | ✓ | Difficulties with originated waves in the liquid surface (Marangoni effects) | ✓ | Use low power lasers to avoid NP breakage and structure deployment | ||
Forced Rayleigh Scattering | Secondary/Relative | 3–5% | ✓ | Dyes necessary to enhance the signal compatible with molten salts or IL’s | ✓ | Dyes necessary to enhance the signal compatible with nanofluids. | ||
Photon Correlation Spectroscopy | Secondary/Relative | 2–3% | ✓ | Optically transparent fluids. Not explored for measurements above 473 K. | ✓ | Optically transparent fluids. | ||
Transient Grating | Secondary/Relative | 3–5% | ✓ | Needs a big improvement in the calibration. Not recommended for high quality work | ✓ | Needs a big improvement in the calibration. Not recommended for high quality work | ||
3ω Method | Secondary | 5% | ✓ | Needs improvement of the theory. However, alternating current, destroying the direction of the polarizing current, avoids current polarization | ✓ | Needs improvement of the theory. However, alternating current, destroying the direction of the polarizing current, avoids nanoparticle deposition and electrically insulation problems. |
Correction | Physical Source | Expression | Reference | Recommendations |
---|---|---|---|---|
Wire physical properties | [22,23] | Apply always correction. | ||
Outer boundary. Cell physical dimensions (b is cell wall diameter) | [23,26] | Apply always correction. Make design of cell to minimize it to 0.1% of . | ||
Compression work (L is the wire length and V is the cell volume) | [23,24] | Negligible in liquid phases. For gases limits the operational zone of measurements to ρ > 40 kg·m−3. | ||
Radial convection and viscous dissipation. Symbol w means wire properties. (αP is the isobaric thermal expansion coefficient of fluid and g the acceleration of gravity) | For gases and liquids (Δρ < ρ0) For liquids, expressions also graphical form, recording the vertical penetration depth of moving fluid front. | [23,24,27,28,29,30] | Avoid onset of convection in the measurements. Design measurement time to t < 5 s to render negligible in liquid phases. Wire(s) must be vertical. Avoid short wires. | |
Radiation (s is the Stefan-Boltzmann constant, K is the a mean extinction coefficient for radiation and n the refractive index of the liquid) | Absorbing fluid | [23,31,32] | Always apply correction, dependent if fluid is transparent or absorbs radiation. K is difficult to obtain experimentally, but usually [30,32]. Introduces curvature in straight line and it is mostly important at high temperatures (molten salts). | |
Temperature jump | [23,29] | Important for gases. Work outside density range where it is not negligible (mean free path of the gas molecules Λ approaching wire diameter (microns). For nanofluids might play a role, but here with nanoparticles dimension. | ||
Effect of variable fluid properties | [24,33] | Always apply correction. Valid for situations where fluid density during a measurement can be considered constant, as in the case of systems far from critical region. | ||
Effect of variable fluid properties (fluids critical region) | ; ; | [30] | Always apply correction. For measurements in the critical region, the properties are extremely strong functions of temperature. | |
Truncation error resulting from the expansion of exponential integral, Equation (8) | [30] | Rendered negligible by design. It decreases with time. | ||
Effect of coating to insulate wires for electrically conducting liquids. Subscript 2 means coating properties. r0 is coating radius | [25,34] | Always apply correction. | ||
Effect of variable fluid properties | [4,32,33] | Always apply correction. When the distribution of the measured temperature rises is not uniform, a more detailed expression is necessary [32]. | ||
Effect of coating to insulate wires for electrically conducting liquids | [25,34] | Always apply correction. Remember to correct the expression for in , which has to be evaluated at the surface of the coat (r = r0). |
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Nieto de Castro, C.A.; Lourenço, M.J.V. Towards the Correct Measurement of Thermal Conductivity of Ionic Melts and Nanofluids. Energies 2020, 13, 99. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13010099
Nieto de Castro CA, Lourenço MJV. Towards the Correct Measurement of Thermal Conductivity of Ionic Melts and Nanofluids. Energies. 2020; 13(1):99. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13010099
Chicago/Turabian StyleNieto de Castro, Carlos A., and Maria José V. Lourenço. 2020. "Towards the Correct Measurement of Thermal Conductivity of Ionic Melts and Nanofluids" Energies 13, no. 1: 99. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13010099
APA StyleNieto de Castro, C. A., & Lourenço, M. J. V. (2020). Towards the Correct Measurement of Thermal Conductivity of Ionic Melts and Nanofluids. Energies, 13(1), 99. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13010099