4.1. Physical, Chemical and Morphological Characterization
Generally, the agglomeration and rapid settling of particles are some of the problems faced by suspended particles in the fluid [
45]. Although the heat transfer enhancement directly depends upon the high durability and the better stability of suspended particles in the fluid, in the present work, the sonication process was used for the preparation and control of the stability of the nanofluids. Duangthongsuk and Wongwises [
31] prepared more stable nanoparticles without any agglomeration by increasing the time of the sonication process. They observed that the test solutions containing a fixed volume ratio of the base fluid (EG: W) with different volume concentrations were highly stable for more than one month. The sedimentation observation of all the samples i.e., Al
2O
3, TiO
2 nanoparticle, nanocellulose CNC, the hybrid (Al
2O
3 + TiO
2) nanoparticle and hybrid (Al
2O
3 + CNC) nanocomposite after six weeks are shown in
Table 2.
Supernatant concentration is also an important factor to control the stability of a nanofluid. In the present work, Al
2O
3/CNC and CNC were prepared without using any surfactant and we found that the solutions remained stable with minimum sedimentation even after one month. The nanofluids were also found to be stable during the thermo-physical investigation and the force convection experiment. Similar results were also found by Rao, Sreeramulu [
46] who reported that nanofluids can remain stable for up to three months by increasing the timing of the ultra-sonication process. Ra, Sreeramulu [
46] and Maheshwary and Nemade [
47] reported thorough investigations on the effect of the sonication process for the synthesis of ZrO
2/water nanofluids. They obtained some surprising results where the sonication process-routed nanofluid exhibited a better thermal conductivity enhancement and it was suitable for cooling applications. Furthermore, the observation for more than one month indicated that the nanofluid displayed a small amount of sedimentation in all base fluids which may be due to the gravitational forces. The stability of the Fe
3O
4 nanoparticles dispersed in a water–ethylene glycol mixture lasting up to one month was also reported by Sundar, Singh [
48]. Upon aging, the particle aggregates may be due to high surface activity, as reported by Mohamed, Sagisaka [
49]. In the present work, it was observed that the sedimentation occurred in the samples after six weeks.
A transmission electron microscope (TEM) was used to acquire the high-resolution images of Al
2O
3, CNC, TiO
2, TiO
2 + Al
2O
3 and Al
2O
3 + CNC in the nanofluid with a high magnification and the results are shown in
Figure 3a–e, respectively. However, the contrast and resolution were limited while acquiring the image of Al
2O
3 and CNC which may be due to low electron densities and a low profile [
50,
51].
Figure 3a shows the TEM image of the dispersed TiO
2 nanoparticles into the ethylene glycol–water mixture (EG–W) fluid which illustrates that primary TiO
2 particles have an almost uniform morphology and are interconnected to each other. However, the particles seemed to be nearly homogeneously dispersed in the base fluid. The TEM image of the Al
2O
3 nanoparticles dispersed evenly into the base fluid is displayed in
Figure 3b which illustrates that the particles are almost uniformly dispersed in the base fluid with very small aggregation. The TEM micrograph of the CNC nanoparticles dispersed in base fluid is represented in
Figure 3c. It can be clearly seen that the CNC nanoparticles completely homogeneously dispersed in the fluid, which is the one of the main requirements of the present application.
Figure 3d,e shows the TEM micrographs of the Al
2O
3/TiO
2 and Al
2O
3/CNC hybrid nanofluids, respectively. It can be observed that the dispersion of the Al
2O
3 and TiO
2 nanoparticle is approximately uniform in the base fluid, however, both types of nanoparticle were not completely interconnected to each other. On the contrary, it can be clearly seen in
Figure 3e that the Al
2O
3/CNC hybrid nanofluids were dispersed uniformly in the fluid. Furthermore, the Al
2O
3 and CNC nanoparticles were completely interconnected to each other i.e., the agglomerated particles which resulted in strong stability enhancement. Philip, Shima [
15] reported that the formation of the agglomerated particles in the nanofluid basically depends upon on the surface contact between the particles. A strong van der Waals force works between the agglomerated particles which is very hard to break it into primary nanoparticles.
Ultraviolet–visible spectrophotometer (UV–Vis) was used to evaluate the stability of the nanoparticles dispersed in the base fluids. The UV–Vis spectrum of all the prepared nanofluids with all the volume concentrations were recorded in the wavelength range of 200–800 nm and the results are shown in
Figure 4a–e. It can be observed from all the UV–Vis spectra that among all the concentrations of all nanofluids, i.e., the TiO
2, Al
2O
3, CNC, Al
2O
3/TiO
2 and the Al
2O
3/CNC nanofluids, 0.9% concentration exhibited the maximum absorption peak, indicating the better stability of the nanofluid suspension. It was also noticed that the maximum absorption peak appeared in range of a 200–400 nm wavelength for all the nanofluids with all the volume concentrations. However, the range was found to be in a 200–250 nm wavelength in the case of the CNC nanofluids with all the volume concentrations. Furthermore, there was no absorption peak noticed for 0.1% Al
2O
3/CNC nanofluids which may be due to the instability of the nanofluid dispersion. Richardson and Zaki [
52] also observed and reported similar behavior in nanofluids which may be because of the adjacent particle. After the formation of a colloidal suspension, the base fluid creates an upward stream which pushes the nanoparticles and prevents them from falling due to the gravity acceleration. Hence, the upward stream impact is greater in a high concentration than a low concentration nanofluid which reduces the absorbance drop in the colloidal suspension.
The crystal structure information of all the samples was collected by recording and analyzing the obtained XRD patterns. The XRD patterns of the TiO
2, Al
2O
3 and the CNC nanoparticles are shown in
Figure 4a–c, respectively. The XRD pattern of TiO
2 is displayed in
Figure 5a where all the characteristic peaks i.e., at 2θ angles of 25.28°, 37.93°, 48.37°, 53.88° and 62.72° correspond to the (101), (103), (200), (105) and (213) respectively, are in good agreement with the standard XRD pattern (ICDD no. 00-001-0562) and consistent with what was reported by Al-Taweel and Saud [
53], which is portrayed in
Figure 6.
Figure 4b shows that the alumina phase which was identified at 2θ values of 19.4°, 37.7°, 45.8° and 66.8° which correspond to the diffraction from the (111), (311), (400) and (440) crystal planes, respectively; these results agreed with the standard XRD pattern (ICDD, PDF no. 01-074-2206 (Al
2O
3) 5.3333 Aluminum Oxide) according to [
54]. The XRD pattern shown in
Figure 4c reveals the pure phase of the CNC (C
6H
10O
5)
n Cellulose-1ß)) nanoparticles where most intense peaks at 2θ angles of 16.6° and 22.9° correspond to the (1, 1, 0) and (2, 0, 0) crystal planes, respectively, and other peaks are well-matched with the standard XRD pattern (ICDD no. 00-056-1718) and in accordance with Kumar, Negi [
55], which is shown in
Figure 7.
The FTIR spectra were recorded to investigate the chemical composition of the mono and hybrid nanofluids and the results are shown in
Figure 8a,b, respectively. It can be noticed from both figures that the FTIR spectra for all the mono and hybrid nanofluids were almost identical. All the spectra of the nanofluids contain a broadband in the frequency range of 3200 to 3650 cm
−1 and one sharp band at 1640 cm
−1 which can be attributed to the stretching and bending mode of the O-H group of EG and water, respectively. The band at around the 2950 cm
−1 wave number in all the spectra may correspond to the stretching of the C–H groups of EG [
53,
56,
57]. The band found at 1412 cm
−1 may correspond to the CH
2 stretching of EG. On the other hand, the band at 2115 cm
−1 can be noticed in the spectra of the CNC and Al
2O
3/CNC nanofluids, which can be ascribed to the C≡C bonds. From both
Figure 8a,b, it can be observed that no band was noticed for the metal oxide (Al
2O
3 and TiO
2) in all the spectra. Besides that, all the bands corresponded to only the EG with water and the CNC chemical composition. Therefore, it can be concluded that no chemical reaction took place between the base fluids and the metal oxide during the preparation.
FESEM was used to investigate the surface morphological properties of all the samples and the results are shown in
Figure 9a–d. From the FESEM image of the TiO
2 nanoparticles (shown in
Figure 9a), the shape of the individual particles is spherical with a diameter below 50 nm. These nanoparticles combined to form bigger particles which look like they are loosely bound or not properly agglomerated. Furthermore, the EDX analysis (inset) indicates the presence of Ti and O atoms in the sample.
Figure 9b and the inset represents the FESEM image and the corresponding EDX pattern of the Al
2O
3 nanoparticles, respectively. The FESEM image depicts that primary particles are almost spherical in shape. These nanoparticles interconnected to each other form large particles (microparticles) that have irregular shapes. The small and bigger particles have diameters in the range of 50–90 nm and 1–5 µm, respectively. Furthermore, the elemental analysis of these particles confirms the presence of Al and O in the nanoparticles (inset). On the other hand, CNC was in the gel form which makes it difficult to analyze the morphological properties using FESEM. Therefore, two samples (i.e., film and powder) of CNC were prepared by drying for the FESEM analysis and the obtained results are shown in the inset of
Figure 9c,d. It can be observed from both figures that no individual nanoparticles could be seen in both samples. However, the particles interconnected with each other formed a porous morphology which looks like a net. Nonetheless, the EDX analysis (inset of
Figure 9d) confirmed the presence of the C and O atoms in the CNC nanoparticles.
4.2. Thermo-Physical Properties Evaluation
It was observed from the literature that the thermal conductivity of the nanofluids significantly increased on increasing the volume concentration of the suspended nanoparticles in the base fluid. For instance, the thermal conductivity enhancement was observed by Fani, Kalteh [
58] with an increasing volume concentration of the nanoparticles. They reported that the collision between the particles intensified causing an increment in the Brownian diffusivity assisting which results in thermal conductivity enhancement. The thermal conductivity of TiO
2, Al
2O
3, CNC, Al
2O
3/TiO
2 and Al
2O
3/CNC nanofluids with different volume concentrations of 0.1%, 0.5% and 0.9% were measured and the results are shown in
Figure 8a. It can be observed from the figure that the thermal conductivity of both the mono and hybrid nanofluids increases by increasing the volume concentration. It was found that the mono nanofluid (Al
2O
3) shows higher thermal conductivity improvement than the CNC and TiO
2 nanofluids, due to the better thermal properties of Al
2O
3. Furthermore, it was shown that the Al
2O
3/CNC hybrid nanofluid exhibited a superior thermal conductivity than any other hybrid as well as mono nanofluids. However, the increasing thermal conductivity of all the nanofluids (mono and hybrid) followed the augmentation of the adding of nanoparticles into the base fluid. Therefore, the 0.9% volume concentration of the Al
2O
3/CNC and Al
2O
3/TiO
2 show a higher thermal conductivity than the 0.5% and 0.1% volume concentration.
In the present study, hybrid nanofluids exhibited better thermal conductivity than the mono nanofluids which may be due to the high kinetic energy generated by the high collisions of particles. Similar phenomenon were also observed by Esfe, Esfandeh [
59] for ZnO/Multi-Walled Carbon NanoTube (MWCNT)/water–EG nanofluids where 28.1% higher thermal conductivity was obtained for hybrid nanofluid with 0.1% volume concentration than the single phase nanofluids at 50 °C. Huang, Wu [
24] has also investigated the thermal conductivity enhancement of Al
2O
3 and MWCNTs dispersed into water-based hybrid nanofluid in a chevron plate heat exchanger and observed a better increment in the thermal conductivity than the Al
2O
3 nanofluid and water. Since the particles are capable of transferring heat directly from one to another at high temperature, therefore, high temperature increases the rate of heat transfer. At a high temperature, the Brownian motion of particles increases due to the high kinetic energy which then enhances the thermal conductivity. The maximum thermal conductivity was achieved at 60 °C in the present work. For instance, on increasing the temperature from 30 °C to 60 °C, the thermal conductivity of the Al
2O
3/CNC hybrid nanofluid increased from 0.57 to 0.59 W/m.K in a 0.9% volume fraction (
Figure 10a). Similar work has also been reported in the literature. For example, Nabil, Azmi [
60] observed an enhancement in the thermal conductivity of 22.8% for the TiO
2-SiO
2/water and EG hybrid nanofluid in a 3% volume fraction at 80 °C temperature which was much better than that observed by Hamid, Azmi [
61] for the SiO
2–TiO
2/water and the EG hybrid nanofluid (22.1%) at 70 °C. Furthermore, Hamid, Azmi [
61] has also reported that the thermal conductivity increased from 13.8% to 16% for the TiO
2–SiO
2/water and the EG hybrid nanofluid by a 1% volume fraction on increasing the temperature from 70 °C to 80 °C. A KD2 Pro Thermal Property Analyzer was used to evaluate the thermal conductivity followed the standard method entitled “American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) D7896-14 Standard Test Method for Thermal Conductivity, Thermal Diffusivity and Volumetric Heat Capacity of Engine Coolants and Related Fluids by Transient Hot Wire Liquid Thermal Conductivity Method”.
The viscosity of all the nanofluids (mono and hybrid) were measured and the obtained results are shown in
Figure 10b. It can be observed from the figure that the viscosity of the nanofluids is higher than the base fluid for both the mono and hybrid nanofluids. As the concentration increased, the viscosity also increased. The viscosity of the Al
2O
3 nanofluids at various volume fractions was found to be higher than the CNC and the TiO
2 nanofluids. A similar effect of the volume concentration of the viscosity was also observed by Namburu, Kulkarni [
62] and Fedele, Colla [
34]. However, the viscosity of 0.1% volume concentration is higher than that of a 0.9% volume fraction of Al
2O
3 nanofluid, which does not support the previous literature on viscosity. Similarly, 0.1% CNC nanofluid exhibits a higher viscosity than a 0.5% CNC nanofluid as the packing of the particle caused movement restriction, where the addition of the CNC causes viscosity depreciation as per the trend observed for Al
2O
3 [
63]. On the other hand, when more particles are added, the hybrid nanofluids such as Al
2O
3/CNC and Al
2O
3/TiO
2 exhibit a higher viscosity than the mono nanofluids (Al
2O
3, CNC and TiO
2) with all the volume concentrations. However, the Al
2O
3/CNC nanofluid dominates over the viscosity of the Al
2O
3/TiO
2 for all the volume concentrations. It can also be noticed from the figure that the viscosity decreases with increasing temperature. For instance, the viscosity of both hybrid (Al
2O
3/CNC and Al
2O
3/TiO
2) nanofluids at all volume concentrations gradually decreased with the increasing temperature and found the lowest at a temperature of 70 °C, whereas the mono nanofluids (Al
2O
3, CNC, and TiO
2) at all volume concentrations, except 0.1% and 0.5% TiO
2, exhibited the lowest viscosity at a temperature of 50 °C which showed an increasing trend at 70 °C. The effect of temperature on the viscosity of nanofluids was clarified by Li, Zou [
14] based on the molecular viewpoint and reported that the intermolecular distance increases with a rising temperature which leads to the diminished pattern of the viscosity. The rotational viscometer was used to measure the viscosity that followed the standard method named “ASTM D2196-10 which is known as the standard test method for rheological properties of non-Newtonian materials by the rotational (Brookfield type) viscometer”.
The density of a nanofluid also plays an important role in the thermo-physical properties of nanofluids and depends on temperature [
64]. The density of the mono and hybrid (TiO
2, Al
2O
3, CNC, Al
2O
3/TiO
2, and Al
2O
3/CNC) nanofluids was measured by varying the temperature as well as the volume concentration, and the obtained results are shown in
Figure 10c. It can be noticed from the figure that the density of all the nanofluids (mono and hybrid) increased on adding nanoparticles into the base fluid and further gradually increased on loading the augmentation of the nanoparticles. However, only a 0.5% volume fraction of Al
2O
3 nanofluid exhibited a higher density than 0.9% Al
2O
3 nanofluid; this could have happened due to its size and unpredictable behavior [
65]. Although the maximum density of all the mono and hybrid nanofluids was observed at a temperature of 30 °C, this gradually decreased until the temperature of 70 °C was reached. However, 0.1% CNC nanofluid contains a slightly higher density at a temperature of 70 °C than at 50 °C. Both hybrid nanofluids (i.e., Al
2O
3/TiO
2 and Al
2O
3/CNC) showed the uppermost density value with regards to the mono nanofluids (Al
2O
3, TiO
2, and CNC), although the Al
2O
3/TiO
2 hybrid nanofluids portrayed a superior density than the other mono (Al
2O
3, TiO
2, and CNC) and hybrid (Al
2O
3/CNC) nanofluids. The digital density meter was used to measure the density of the nanofluids and the hybrid nanofluids following the procedure of the “ASTM D4052-18 which is acknowledged as the standard test method for density, relative density and API gravity of liquids by digital density meter”.
Specific heat capacity is another vital thermo-physical property of nanofluids to observe their heat transfer performance. The specific heat capacity of the Al
2O
3, CNC, TiO
2, Al
2O
3/CNC and the Al
2O
3/TiO
2 nanofluids was measured as a function of temperature as well as a volume concentration and the obtained results are shown in
Figure 10d. It was observed from the results that all the nanofluids (mono and hybrid) exhibited low and high specific heat at a temperature of 30 °C and 90 °C, respectively. Furthermore, the Al
2O
3/CNC hybrid nanofluid shows the lowest specific heat capacity than any other hybrid nanofluids. On the other hand, the CNC nanofluids (all volume concentrations) displayed the highest specific heat capacity compared to the other mono nanofluids. In the case of the CNC nanofluids, 0.5% CNC nanofluid exhibited the highest specific heat value compared to the rest of the CNC concentrations. On the contrary, the 0.1% Al
2O
3 nanofluid depicts the uppermost specific heat capacity compared to the other concentrations of the Al
2O
3 nanofluids. It was observed from the above discussion that these results were not consistent with the typical research proposal. However, the better specific heat capacity value exhibited by the CNC nanoparticles was a surprising result. Furthermore, the nanofluid with CNC nanoparticles showed the highest specific heat capacity compared to the nanofluids with hybrid nanoparticles at a temperature of 30 °C. Overall, it was noticed from
Figure 10d that the specific heat capacity was directly and inversely proportional to the temperature and volume concentration. Similar results have also been observed by Zhou and Ni [
28]. Basically, the volume concentration has a bigger impact than the temperature on the specific heat capacity measurement [
66]. Moreover, the specific heat capacity was more effective in the heat transfer application than the thermal conductivity [
67]. Therefore, the nanofluid with enhanced specific heat capacity was required for an efficient thermal exchange application. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) equipment was used to measure the specific heat of the nanofluids and the hybrid nanofluids following the “ASTM E1269-11(2018) Standard Test Method for Determining Specific Heat Capacity by Differential Scanning Calorimetry” method.
Based on the results above discussed, the statistical method was used to optimize the nanofluid to be used as a thermal transport fluid in the automotive cooling system. As per the measurement procedure, the inlet temperature was kept constant at 70 °C and the obtained values of the thermo-physical measurement with a different volume concentration at 70 °C are tabulated in
Table 3.
The obtained thermo-physical measurement values were used to determine the response optimizer in the Minitab 17 software and the optimized volume concentration from the statistical analytical tool was found to be 0.4893% which can be rounded up to 0.5%. The individual desirability value (d) determines the optimized setting of the single response. The inverse parabolic graph proves that the thermo-physical property results are within the limits of the obtained optimized volume concentration. In other words, the value obtained from the analysis was 0.6112 which was in good agreement with the 0.5% concentration of the analysis. It was observed from the literature that the increment in the specific heat capacity was important with respect to the thermal conductivity enhancement for the automotive cooling application, reported by Tomar and Tripathi [
68]. Therefore, the CNC and CNC + Al
2O
3 nanofluids with a 0.5% volume concentration were carefully chosen as the thermal transport fluids to be compared with convectional ethylene glycol–water mixture (EG–W).
After finalizing the optimum concentration of nanofluids, the heat transfer and flow behavior measurement of the conventional EG-W mixture, the CNC and the hybrid nanofluid (Al2O3/CNC) were carried out by using the fabricated radiator test rig. The convection heat transfer, the experimental heat transfer coefficient and the temperature distribution profile were measured in a radiator for heat transfer analysis and it is vital to compare these characteristics with thermal transport fluids. Furthermore, the Reynolds number, the Nusselt number and the friction factor were estimated using formulas for the flow behavior analysis, which was important to identify the characteristics of the CNC, the Al2O3/CNC and the EG-W. The heat transfer applicability of the nanofluids can be concluded by comparing their heat transfer performance and their flow behavior as follows in the next sections.
(a) Experimental heat transfer coefficient: the temperature distribution obtained from the experiments and the measured thermal conductivity were used to determine the heat transfer coefficient using the following Equation (8):
In this formula, h denotes the heat transfer coefficient, Cp is the specific heat capacity, As denotes the exposed surface area, Tin is the input temperature, Tout is the outlet temperature, Ts is the wall temperature (solid) and Tb is bulk fluid temperature (liquid).
The obtained average experimental heat transfer coefficient as a function of the flow rate in (LPM unit) is shown in
Figure 11a. It was observed from the figure that the experimental heat transfer coefficient for Al
2O
3/CNC, CNC and EG–W were found to be 94.93, 60.28 and 45.84 W/m
2 °C at a 3.5 LPM flow rate and these values decrease up to 90.22, 57.98 and 42.5 W/m
2 °C at a 4.5 LPM flow rate, respectively. The values of the experimental heat transfer coefficient for Al
2O
3/CNC, CNC and EG–W goes further down up to 87.23, 54.23 and 40.02 W/m
2 °C at 5.5 LPM, respectively. It can be concluded from the obtained results that the experimental heat transfer coefficient directly depends upon the relation with the flow rate. Similar results have also been observed by Ali, Ali [
69]. Namburu, Das [
70] also investigated the heat transfer performance in a radiator test rig for an EG–W mixture with dispersed copper oxide (CuO) and reported that the heat transfer coefficient boosted up to 1.35 times more than the base fluid at a 20,000 Reynolds number. Moreover, the fan produced a drastic increment in the heat transfer coefficient value compared to the without a fan circumstance. The abnormal behavior in the high-transfer coefficient value of the Al
2O
3/CNC nanofluid can be better correlated with the high specific heat capacity and the thermal conductivity of the Al
2O
3/CNC rather than the CNC and EG-W. Generally, the rate of heat transfer affects the heat removal application. Therefore, the observed high relative heat transfer coefficient value indicates that the better heat removal can be obtained in Al
2O
3/CNC rather than CNC and EG-W at a low volumetric flow rate. Besides, the heat transfer coefficient value with the influence of a fan has a higher value than in circumstances without a fan. Indeed, the air velocity used during the measurement accelerates the rate of the heat removal in the radiator test rig.
(b) Convection heat transfer: the obtained convective heat transfer values for 0.5% Al
2O
3/CNC, 0.5% CNC and EG-W as a function of the flow rate is shown in
Figure 11b. From the figure, the maximum convection heat transfer was found to be 880.42, 763.29 and 566.32 W for Al
2O
3/CNC, CNC and EG–W at 5.5 LPM, respectively. In other words, the 55.46% enhancement in the convective heat transfer was observed for Al
2O
3/CNC rather than for EG-W and 15.35% than the CNC at a 5.5 LPM flow rate. Furthermore, the convective heat transfers of 858.85 W for Al
2O
3/CNC, 729.94 W for CNC and 545.78 W for EG-W were measured at a flow rate of 4.5 LPM. The minimum value of the convective heat transfer, i.e., 835.38, 704.32 and 525.02 W for Al
2O
3/CNC, CNC and EG-W were measured at a 3.5 LPM flow rate. Based on the discussed results it can be concluded that the Al
2O
3/CNC exhibits a higher convective heat transfer, i.e., 15% more than the CNC and 50% more than the EG-W at all three flow rates. The high thermal conductivity and specific heat capacity of Al
2O
3/CNC were considered the main reasons for the high convective heat transfer in Al
2O
3/CNC.
(c) Reynolds number: the Reynolds number is an important factor and it needs to be calculated to identify the type of flow regime in the radiator test rig. The Reynolds number was calculated using Equation (9) and the calculated Reynolds number as a function of the plotted flow rate is shown in
Figure 12a. The results revealed that the maximum/minimum Reynolds number was calculated for Al
2O
3/CNC, CNC and EG–W which are 3852.32/2433.42, 6234.54/4329.43 and 8741.12/5483.83 at 5.5/3.5 LPM, respectively. From the results, it can be seen that the Reynolds number for all the above nanofluids have a proportional relation with the flow rate i.e., the Reynolds number increased when the flow rate was rising. Therefore, it can be concluded that the flow regime achieved by the Al
2O
3/CNC, CNC and EG–W can be considered as turbulent and remains similar inside the radiator at a varying flow rate between 3.5 and 5.5 LPM. The almost identical trend of the Reynolds number was also observed by Ali, Ali [
69] for a ZnO nanofluid. Furthermore, Heris, Esfahany [
9] has also investigated the properties of an Al
2O
3 nanofluid and obtained a lower value for the Reynolds number than for the base fluid. Basically, a low Reynolds number is more likely to correlate with the impact of a high viscous force than the inertial force in the nanofluid [
71]. Therefore, the low value of the Reynolds number of the CNC may be due to the high dynamic viscosity value rather than the EG–W. Furthermore, the high density in the CNC results of the high inertial effect on the nanofluid plays an important role in determining the Reynolds number. In view of this, the Reynolds number increases with the flow rate which can be explained by the proportional relation of the Reynolds number to velocity:
where
v is the flow velocity,
ρ is the density,
µ is the dynamic viscosity and
D is the hydraulic diameter. These variables were measured using the instrumentation provided in the setup description (
Section 3.1) and the thermo-physical properties evaluation (
Section 4.2).
(d) Nusselt number: the Nusselt number is also one of the vital parameters of the flow behavior of nanofluids. Basically, it is the ratio of the convective to conductive heat transfer across a boundary. In the present work, the Nusselt number was calculated for all the aforementioned nanofluids using Equation (10) and the results are shown in
Figure 12b in the form of the Nusselt number vs. the flow rate plot. In the present work, the maximum obtained Nusselt numbers for the Al
2O
3/CNC, CNC and EG–W were 24.57, 18.34 and 13.64 at 5.5 LPM, whereas the minimum values were 21.86, 15.66 and 10.98 at a 3.5 LPM flow rate, respectively. From the graph, the Nusselt number has a proportional relation with the flow rate. The high influence of the convective heat transfer over the conductive heat transfer and the high experimental heat transfer coefficient value can be considered the reason for the higher value of the Nusselt number observed for the CNC than for the EG-W [
26]. Therefore, it can be concluded that the value of the heat transfer coefficient was directly proportional to the Nusselt number:
where
h is the heat transfer coefficient,
D is the hydraulic diameter and
k is the measured thermal conductivity of the different nanofluids.
(e) Thermal heat analysis of nanofluids: the thermal heat analysis of all the nanofluids was carried by capturing the images of the heat distribution of the fluid inside the radiator using thermal infrared camera FLIR model. The inside temperature of the radiator test rig was in the range of 30–70 °C during the image capturing. The thermal images of EG–W, Al
2O
3/CNC and CNC with a 0.5% volume concentration circulating in the radiator are shown in
Figure 13a–e,
Figure 14a–e and
Figure 15a–e, respectively. The yellowish or green color in the radiator images reveals the absorption of heats during the measurement in the test rig. In view of this, it can be observed from the figure that the nanofluid covers the maximum area having a low temperature (green color), however, the highest heat dissipation occurred in the middle of the radiator. Among all the prepared nanofluids, it was observed that the Al
2O
3/CNC nanofluid absorbed the most heat.
(d) Temperature at radiator fin: as per the above discussion, 0.5% volume concentration Al
2O
3/CNC was found to be better than the CNC and EG–W in terms of thermal heat properties, therefore, it was selected for further analysis. For the measurement, five points were chosen at the radiator fin to analyze the temperature at three different flow rates. This temperature was selected to get the average temperature on the fins. The temperature values at the 3.5, 4.5 and 5.5 LPM flow rates are shown in
Figure 16a–c, respectively. It was observed that point 5 has less temperature compared to point 1. This was due to the heat transfer process occurring in the fins where the temperature is reduced.