A Review on Electrical Conductivity of Nanoparticle-Enhanced Fluids
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Models for Electrical Conductivity
3. Literature Overview
3.1. Nanofluids with Ethylene Glycol (EG) as Base Fluid
3.2. Nanofluids with Water as Base Fluid
3.3. Nanofluids with Water-Ethylene Glycol Mixture as Base Fluid
3.4. Nanofluids Based on Other Liquids
3.4.1. Bioglycol-Based Nanofluids
3.4.2. Oil-Based Nanofluids
4. Discussion on Experimental Results
4.1. Nanoparticle Concentration Influence on Electrical Conductivity
4.2. Base Fluid Influence on Electrical Conductivity
4.3. Temperature Influence on Electrical Conductivity
4.4. Other Factors Influence on Electrical Conductivity
4.5. Electrical Conductivity—A Method for Stability Estimation?
5. Conclusions
Challenges and Future Directions for Research
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Nomenclature | |
K0 | fitting parameter in Hill equation, - |
L | Avogadro constant, L = 6.02214086 × 1023 mol−1 |
n | fitting parameter in Hill equation, - |
r | radius of nanoparticles, nm |
R | thermodynamic constant, R = 8.314 kJ/kmol K |
t | temperature, °C |
T | temperature, K |
U0 | zeta potential, mV |
Greek Symbols | |
α | ratio of electrical conductivity, - |
ε0 | dielectric constant of vacuum, - |
εr | dielectric constant of base fluid, - |
φ | volume fraction of nanoparticles, - |
η | viscosity, Pa.s |
ρ | density, kg/m3 |
σ | electrical conductivity, µS/cm |
Subscripts | |
B | refers to Brownian motion |
bf | refers to base-fluid |
E | refers to electrophoretic mobility |
M | refers to Maxwell model |
nf | refers to nanofluid |
p | refers to nanoparticles |
Abbreviations | |
ANN | artificial neural network model |
BG | Bio glycol |
CNT | carbon nanotubes |
EDL | electrical double layer |
EHD | electro hydrodynamics |
EG | ethylene glycol |
MHD | magneto hydrodynamics |
MWCNT | multi-wall carbon nanotubes |
NEIL | ionic liquids enhanced nanofluids |
PG | propylene glycol |
RDB | refined, bleached and deodorized (refers to oils) |
SDBS | Sodium dodecyl benzenesulfonate |
SDS | Sodium dodecyl sulfate |
TEC | thermo-electrical conductivity |
W | water |
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Base Fluid | Nanoparticle Type | Observation | Relevance as a Conductive Fluid, if Compared to the Base Fluid | Equipment Used for Electrical Conductivity Measurement | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
ethylene glycol (EG) | nitrogen doped activated carbon/graphene (NACG) | Increase was noticed while the samples concentration increases. | yes | AB200, Fisher scientific | Shirazi et al. [22] |
MgO and Si-TiO | Theoretical study using an artificial neural network (ANN) model. | no information provided | – | Mohamed [23] | |
β-SiC | The variation with volume concentration was found to be linear. | yes | SG 23 SevenGo Duo, Mettler Toledo | Akilu et al. [24] | |
In2O3 | Maximum growth in electrical conductivity of In2O3–EG nanofluids was detected for 0.0081% concentration at 333.15 K, 27,300%. | yes | MultiLine 363 | Fal et al. [25] | |
graphene | Enhancement up to 220%. | yes | not declared | Baby and Ramaprabhu [26] | |
nanodiamond | Maximum electrical conductivity enhancement was for 0.0338 volume fraction of nanoparticles (98 times higher than EG). | yes | Multiline 3630 (WTW GmbH, Weilheim, Germany) | Zyla et al. [27] | |
aluminum nitride | Increase of up to 600 times in electrical conductivity with the upsurge in nanoparticles concentration. | yes | MultiLine 3410 | Zyla and Fal [28] | |
SiO2 | Thermo-electrical conductivity (TEC) analysis revealed that there are no benefits from using this nanofluid in heat transfer processes. | yes | MultiLine 3410 | Zyla and Fal [29] | |
silicon oxide lignin (SiO2-L) | Increasing mass fraction, the conductivity increases. | yes | MultiLine 3410 | Fal et al. [30] | |
Si3N4 | High progression in electrical conductivity due to several factors and especially due to concentration increase. | yes | MultiLine 3630m | Zyla et al. [31] | |
water | Al2O3 | Highest value of electrical conductivity, 2370 µS/cm, was logged for 0.2% concentration at a temperature of 25.9 °C. | yes | not declared | Zawrah et al. [32] |
Fe3O4 | A considerable enhancement of electrical conductivity with the upsurge in concentration and temperature. | yes | WagtechEc-meter model Con 11 | Bagheli et al. [33] | |
CuO | Enhancement of electrical conductivity with the increase in temperature and volume concentration. | yes | EC-Meter GLP 31 from CRISON | Coelho et al. [34] | |
un-doped and zinc doped cobalt ferrite | Maxwell model is not suitable. | no information provided | Cyberscan CON110 | Anu and Hemalatha [35] | |
Alumina CuO MgO CNT titania ZnO | Linear correlations were proposed by authors. | yes | JENWAY 4520 | Shoghl et al. [36] | |
Ag SiC Graphene oxide (GO) | Electrical conductivities of nanofluids is linearly increasing with temperature and concentration. | yes | AZ86505 benchtop multi-meter | Heyhat and Irannezhad [37] | |
Fe2O3 | Enhancement of electrical conductivity with the increase in temperature and volume concentration. | yes | Eutech instrument PC 2700 | Nurdin and Satriananda [38] | |
diamond | Electrical conductivity was found lower than similar concentrations of other nanoparticles. | no | Orion A122 Conductivity Meter (Thermo-Orion, Boston, USA) | Mashali et al. [39] | |
TiO2 | Enhancement in electrical conductivity in dependence with nanoparticle addition. | yes | digital conductivity meter (Dip cell, Pt plate surface, Model 1054, Amber Science Inc., OR, US) | Modesto-Lopez and Biswas [40] | |
graphene | Enhancement up to 1400%. | yes | – | Baby and Ramaprabhu [26] | |
Al2O3 | An increase in electrical conductivity of about 5.5. times compared to water. | yes | CyberScan PC10 | Zakaria et al. [41] | |
graphene oxide (GO) | Enhancement of electrical conductivity. | yes | BA 380 | Hadadian et al. [42] | |
Al2O3 | A disagreement was noticed between diverse electrical conductivity models for upper values of Richardson number. | no information provided | – | Selimefendigil and Öztop [43] | |
Al2O3 | Considerable augmentation of electrical conductivity with volume fraction. | yes | Tetracon | Ganguly et al. [44] | |
Al2O3 | At room temperature an increase of 379.6% in effective electrical conductivity of nanofluid is detected for 4% alumina. | yes | Multiparameter Consort C 831 | Minea and Luciu [45] Minea [46] | |
ND-Ni nano-composite | A disagreement was noticed between experimental results and conventional models. | no information provided | two-pole conductivity electrode meter (Mettler-Toledo, USA) | Sundar et al. [47] | |
TiO2 SiO2 Alumina + titania hybrid alumina + silica hybrid | Large enhancement of electrical conductivity was noticed, depending also on the nanoparticles synergy. | yes | Edge® Multiparameter HI 2030 (Hanna Instruments) | Chereches and Minea [48] | |
EG–water mixture | TiO2 | Experimental results point out that the Maxwell model is not capable to foretell the electrical conductivity. | yes | IntelliCALTM CDC401 | Islam et al. [49] Islam and Shabani [50] |
Cu Al2O3 CuO | The Maxwell model under predicts the experiment. | yes | CYBERSCAN CON 11 | Sarojini et al. [51] | |
SiO2 | The electrical conductivity rises by about 10 times. | yes | Jenco Instruments Inc | Guo et al. [52] | |
graphene | Electrical conductivity rapidly increased with loading of GONs until 0.07 wt.%. | depending on concentration | Orion™ VERSA STAR™ Multiparameter Benchtop Meter | Ijam et al. [53] | |
functionalized graphene nanosheets | Electrical conductivity enhanced to a percentage up to 8620%. | yes | – | Kole and Dey [54] | |
Al2O3 | The change in electrical conductivity is rather low. | no | CyberScan PC10 | Zakaria et al. [41] | |
bio glycol (BG) | Al2O3 | Electrical conductivity increases with temperature. | yes, even if the alumina addition decreases slightly the electrical conductivity of BG | Cyberscan PC-10 | Khdher et al. [55] |
bio glycol–water mixture | Al2O3 | Electrical conductivity of BG:W in 40%:60% decreased progressively while adding nanoparticles. | no | Cyberscan PC-10 | Abdolbaqi et al. [56] |
diesel oil | Graphene multi-wall carbon nanotubes (MWCNT) | Nanofluids with functional nanomaterials have inferior electrical conductivity compared to those with non-functional ones. | no, because Diesel has extremely low electrical conductivity | non declared electrical property analyzer | Naddaf and Heris [57] |
Base Fluid | Electrical Conductivity (µS/cm) | Reference |
---|---|---|
EG | 0.12 | Akilu et al. [24] |
PG | 0.10 | |
Distilled water | 6 | Zakaria et al. [41] |
EG | 1.07 | |
EG | 3.14 | Islam et al. [49] |
EG-Water 50:50 | 5.03 | |
Water | 5.44 | Guo et al. [52] |
EG-Water 20:80 | 4.22 | |
EG-Water 40:60 | 1.9 | |
EG-Water 60:40 | 1.47 | |
EG-Water 80:20 | 1.36 | |
EG | 0.33 | |
Distilled water-EG 60:40 | 12.7 | Ijam et al. [53] |
Distilled water | 6 | Abdolbaqi et al. [56] |
BG | 45 | |
BG | 53 | Khdher et al. [55] |
BG-Water 60:40 | 389 | Abdolbaqi et al. [56] |
BG-Water 40:60 | 620 | |
Diesel oil | authors cannot measure it | Naddaf and Heris [57] |
Base Fluid | Nanoparticle Type | Temperature Influence over Electrical Conductivities Values | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
EG | nitrogen doped activated carbon/graphene (NACG) | • maximum enhancement of 11,000% at 30 °C for 0.06%. temperature does not linearly influence the electrical conductivity values, a decrease was noticed at 35 °C and no explanation was provided | Shirazi et al. [22] |
β-SiC | • maximum enhancement of 53.5% for 1 vol.% the dependence of β-SiC NFs electrical conductivity on temperature can be modelled using an Arrhenius-type equation | Akilu et al. [24] | |
In2O3 | • the highest increase in electrical conductivity was achieved for 0.0081 vol.% at temperature of 333.15 K and it was 272 times higher than that in case of pure ethylene glycol at 298.15 K. | Fal et al. [25] | |
water | Fe3O4 | • maximum enhancement of 360% at 65 °C | Bagheli et al. [33] |
CuO | • The conductivity increases with increasing temperature | Coelho et al. [34] | |
un-doped and zinc doped cobalt ferrite | • up to 94% enhancement at 308 K the percentage enhancement in electrical conductivity decreases with the increase in temperature, as thermal agitation hinders the percolation behavior | Anu and Hemalatha [35] | |
Ag SiC Graphene oxide (GO) | • the maximum augmentation occurred in temperature of 25 °C and weight fraction of 0.05% GO maximum enhancement of 15 times higher at 50 °C for 1% SiC | Heyhat and Irannezhad [37] | |
Fe2O3 | • up to 22% enhancement for 2.5% at 60 °C | Nurdin and Satriananda [38] | |
Al2O3 | • up to 115% for 3% at 45 °C | Ganguly et al. [44] | |
Al2O3 | • linear increase with temperature | Minea and Luciu [45] | |
ND-Ni nano-composite | • linear increase with temperature maximum electrical conductivity enhancement for 0.1% ND–Ni is 1339.81% at 24 °C | Sundar et al. [47] | |
TiO2 SiO2 alumina + titania hybrid alumina + silica hybrid | • linear increase with temperature | Chereches and Minea [48] | |
EG-water mixture | TiO2 | • maximum enhancement of 13 times higher for 0.5% at 70 °C | Islam et al. [49] Islam and Shabani [50] |
Cu Al2O3 CuO | • linear increase of electrical conductivity with temperature. no appreciable improvement of electrical conductivity with temperature for low volume fractions (less than 0.5%) | Sarojini et al. [51] | |
SiO2 | • up to 10 times at 45 °C for the nanofluid with water | Guo et al. [52] | |
graphene | • at 25 °C, maximum improvement in electrical conductivity is 1664% at 0.10% concentration | Ijam et al. [53] | |
bio glycol | Al2O3 | • maximum enhancement of 5112% was obtained by 0.1% Al2O3 at 30 °C temperature linearly influences electrical conductivity | Khdher et al. [55] |
diesel oil | Graphene MWCNT | • temperature linearly influences electrical conductivity in the range 5–100 °C | Naddaf and Heris [57] |
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Minea, A.A. A Review on Electrical Conductivity of Nanoparticle-Enhanced Fluids. Nanomaterials 2019, 9, 1592. https://doi.org/10.3390/nano9111592
Minea AA. A Review on Electrical Conductivity of Nanoparticle-Enhanced Fluids. Nanomaterials. 2019; 9(11):1592. https://doi.org/10.3390/nano9111592
Chicago/Turabian StyleMinea, Alina Adriana. 2019. "A Review on Electrical Conductivity of Nanoparticle-Enhanced Fluids" Nanomaterials 9, no. 11: 1592. https://doi.org/10.3390/nano9111592
APA StyleMinea, A. A. (2019). A Review on Electrical Conductivity of Nanoparticle-Enhanced Fluids. Nanomaterials, 9(11), 1592. https://doi.org/10.3390/nano9111592