A Review on Pool and Flow Boiling Enhancement Using Nanofluids: Nuclear Reactor Application
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Review Methodology
2.1. Framing Question for the Literature Review
- Which individual, research groups or institutions are studying the application of nanofluids in HVs?
- What are the different experiments carried out in HVs with nanofluids?
- What are the types of nanomaterials and base fluids being applied?
- What are the types of preparation methods applied to formulate nanofluids?
- What are the conditions of the experiments in HVs with nanofluids?
- What are the parameters measured during experiments with nanofluids in HVs?
2.2. Locating the Appropriate Works
2.3. Selection and Evaluation of the Quality of the Studies
- I.
- Inclusion criteria:
- 1.
- An article provides applications of nanofluids in PFCs and HVs;
- 2.
- An article provides application of nanoparticles and base fluids for PFCs and HV;
- 3.
- An article provides boiling or two-phase heat transfer phenomena in nanofluids;
- 4.
- An article provides the study of the heat transfer coefficient and critical heat flux in nanofluids;
- 5.
- Articles published in the last ten years.
- II.
- Exclusion criteria:
- 1.
- Articles not related to PFCs and HV cooling with nanofluids;
- 2.
- Articles not presenting boiling or two-phase phenomena with nanofluids;
- 3.
- Articles presented in other languages other than English;
- 4.
- Short article types such as conference papers, short communications, etc.
2.4. Briefing the Evidence
2.5. Construing the Findings
3. Statistics of Nanofluid Applications in Fusion Reactors
4. Progress in Fusion Reactor Cooling Applications with Nanofluids
Researchers | Type of Nanofluids; Particle Size; Concentrations (%) | Type of Research | Computational Geometry or Setup | Research Outcome |
---|---|---|---|---|
Sergis et al. [11] | Al2O3–water; 50 nm | Simulation and experiment | Lab-scale HV | Enhancement in heat transfer |
Sergis et al. [13] | Al2O3–water, 50 nm; 0.0001% | Experimental and simulation | Lab-scale HV | Enhancement in heat transfer |
Genco et al. [23] | Al2O3–water, 0.001% | Simulation | Rectangular channel with swirl inserts for PFC | Enhancement in heat transfer and CHF |
Pan et al. [24] | Al2O3–water; 10–20 nm; 0.005–0.01% | Experimental | Lab-scale HV | Enhancement in heat transfer |
Jiang et al. [25] | Al2O3–water; 10 nm; 0.01% and 1% | Experimental | A drum with rotatory arrangements | Corrosive effect of nanofluid with increasing concentration |
5. Progress in Boiling Heat Transfer with Nanofluids
5.1. Progress in Pool Boiling Heat Transfer with Nanofluids
Experimental Work
5.2. Analytical and Numerical Work
Researchers | Type of Nanofluids | Modeling and Correlations | Remarks | Research Outcome |
---|---|---|---|---|
Li et al. [49] | Si–water | Numerical modeling | Influence of Brownian motion is taken into the model development. Numerical two-fluid model is considered. Bubble departure diameter is presented. | Brownian motion is important in boiling heat transfer. A decrease in the HTC observed with nanofluids. Accurate prediction of pool boiling heat transfer in nanofluids with the proposed model. Wettability, surface characteristics, and bubble diameters are important to predict the boiling in nanofluids. |
Kamel et al. [50] | Numerical simulation and analysis | Two-phase Eulerian –Eulerian approach and phase interactions are considered. Wettability and surface roughness are incorporated. | Effect of the vapor fraction in pure water is more significant. Quenching heat flux plays a dominant role in pool boiling heat transfer. | |
Salehi et al. [51] | Si–water, 0.01% | Numerical simulation and analysis | Two-phase Eulerian multiphase scheme with the heat flux partitioning model is applied to predict the bubble parameters. | Particle deposition on the boiling surface plays a key role in controlling the boiling of the nanofluid. Deposition effect hinders the heat transfer by enhancing the thermal resistance between the heating surface and test fluid |
Balcilar et al. [52] | TiO2–water | ANN-based modeling | The artificial neural methods yield better results on predicting the heat flux and the boiling HTC than the existing empirical models and correlations. | Boiling HTC was found dependent on the liquid dynamic viscosity, wall super heat, nanoparticle concentration, liquid density, and roughness of the heating surface. |
Ganapathy et al. [53] | Al2O3–water | Surface particle interaction, wettability parameter. | 67% enhancement in heat transfer in base fluid boiling on the nanoparticle-coated surface. | |
Gobinath et al. [54] | Al2O3–water | ANSYS simulation | 2D steady-pressure-based implicit solver with Gauss–Seidel iterative procedure for solving the mathematical model. | The velocity of nanoparticles has a diminishing effect near the heater surface. The combined effect of the Peclet number and time-scale diffusion fortify the thermo-diffusion and advection process in the heat transfer process |
6. Progress in Flow Boiling Heat Transfer with Nanofluids
6.1. Experimental Work
6.2. Analytical and Numerical Work
References | Nanofluids; Particle Size (nm and µm) and Concentration | Topic/Method of Simulation | The Geometry and Material of the Test Section Dimension/Diameter (mm/nm/μm); Length (mm/nm/μm) Flow Parameters: Pressure System (kPa)/d (mm)/G (kg/ m2s) | Results of Flow Boiling Nanofluids |
---|---|---|---|---|
Abedini et al. [71] | Al2O3–water; 30 nm; 1, 2 and 4 vol% | Prediction of the axial vapor volume fraction of a nanofluid in the subcooled flow boiling /two-phase mixture model | A circular tube and an annulus; 1.37 bar, 1.65 bar, and 1 bar; 156.15 kg/m2s, 634.5 kg/m2s, 1115.0 kg/m2s, 1500–2500 kg/m2s | The model could predict the axial vapor volume fraction and temperature distribution well; at a constant inlet velocity of nanofluids, the increase in concentration caused a decrease in the axial volume fraction of vapor; at a constant inlet mass flux, the axial vapor volume fraction was higher compared to the previous case due to the lower velocity of the nanofluid |
Rabiee et al. [83] | Al2O3–water; 8–9 vol% | Influence of alumina nanoparticles on critical heat flux (CHF) and dryout phenomenon/Eulerian–Eulerian framework, RPI model, FLUENT | A single vertical channel of a typical PWR with 17 × 17 fuel assemblies in which rod bundles are arrayed in an 8 × 8 pattern | Improved heat removal enhancement; improve CHF; postponed dryout phenomenon; caused sedimentation and fouling |
Abedini et al. [84] | Al2O3–water; 30 nm; 1, 2 and 4% | Numerical investigation of subcooled flow boiling/two-phase mixture model, k-ε model | Tube and annulus; 1–2.69 atm; 156.15–2500 kg/m2s; | Increasing concentration of nanoparticles enhanced the heat transfer; A lower concentration of nanoparticles (1–2%) was more effective than a higher concentration (4%) on the HTC; increasing the inlet mass flow rate, may increase or decrease the HTC; Specific heat and viscosity did not have a significant effect on the HTC |
Esfe et al. [85] | Ag–water; 30 nm and 50 nm; 0.125, 0.25, 0.5, 0.75, and 1 vol% | Neural network design for predicting the heat transfer and pressure drop characteristics/ multi-objective artificial neural network modeling | A double-tube heat exchanger with a pipe length of 111 cm | The relative pressure drop and Nusselt number were independent of the Reynolds number, but they depended on the nanoparticle volume fraction; the developed model was able to predict the pressure loss and Nusselt number for heat exchangers using nanofluids with high accuracy |
Wang et al. [86] | Al2O3–water; 20–56 nm; 1.0, 2.0, 3.0 and 4.0 vol% | Numerical simulation on bubble dynamics’ behavior during flow boiling/ moving particle semi-implicit method (MPS-MAFL) | 0.1 MPa | Bubbles grew faster, and along with bubble departure, the frequency increased with increasing volume concentration of nanofluids; The nanofluid with a nanoparticle diameter of 29 nm showed a maximum value; an optimal nanoparticle diameter range was suggested between 20 nm and 38 nm for water/Al2O3 nanofluids |
Rakhsha et al. [87] | CuO–water; 68 nm; 0.1 and 0.2 vol% | Investigations on turbulent forced convection flow/Open FOAM Version 2.1.2. | A horizontal coiled tube with a heating tank of 40 cm ∗× 60 cm × 40 cm cubic chamber made of 2 mm stainless steel plate. | Experimental results predicted an enhancement of the pressure drop and heat transfer for water 14–16% and 16–17%, respectively; numerical simulation predicted only 6–7% and 9–10% enhancements for water in the pressure drop and heat transfer, respectively; correlations developed |
Aminfar et al. [88] | Fe3O4–R113; 10 nm; 4 vol% | Numerical study of non-uniform magnetic fields’ effects/control volume technique, SIMPLEC algorithm, SST k-ω model, a three-dimensional two-fluid model | A stainless-steel, Plexiglass-, and optical-quartz-made, straight vertical annulus with ID 15.87 mm, OD 38.02 mm, length 3.66 m; 2.69 bar; 784 kg/m2s | Single-phase convection heat transfer rate increased; CHF in the subcooled boiling flow increased |
Sasmito et al. [89] | Al2O3–water, CuO–water; 0, 1, 2 and 3% | Numerical evaluation of laminar passive heat transfer enhancement/computational fluid dynamics (CFD) | Coiled square tubes with 4 different configurations (straight, conical spiral, in-plane spiral, and helical spiral) | The addition of small amounts of nanoparticles improved the heat transfer performance up to 1%; further addition deteriorated the performance; Al2O3 nanofluids gave higher heat transfer (approximately 5%) than CuO nanofluids |
Purbia et al. [90] | Graphene–water; 0.025%, 0.05%, 0.075%, 0.1% | Modeling and simulation for two-dimensional steady-state momentum transfer and heat energy consumption/MATLAB R2018b | A rectangular enclosure with 100 × 100 grids; three different inlet velocities (0.5 m/s, 1 m/s, and 1.5 m/s) | Thermal performance at turbulent condition was higher than the base fluid (2–300%) at higher concentrations; dramatic reduction in the operating cost |
Tafarroj et al. [91] | TiO2–water; 0.5, 1, and 2 vol% | Prediction of the HTC and Nusselt number during flow/artificial neural network modeling (ANN) for predicting the HTC (23 datasets) and Nusselt number (72 datasets) | 40 microchannels, each having a length of 4 cm, width 500 μm, height 800 μm; two values of the Reynolds number, i.e., 400 and 1200 | The ANN was able to produce convincing results of the HTC with 0.2% relative error and Nusselt number values with 0.3% relative error |
Mohammad pourfard et al. [92] | Fe3O4–water; 0.1 vol% | Study of the influence of magnetic-field-induced centrifugal force on flow boiling | A vertical annulus with 0 mm, 1 mm, 2 mm, and 4 mm heights of twisted fins, ID 4 mm, OD 12 mm, thickness 0.05 mm, length of channel 500 mm; 5 MPa; 311 kg/m2s | Inserting a spiral fin into the inner wall of the annulus enhanced the rate of convective heat transfer and decreased the evaporative mass flux; the application of a transverse non-uniform magnetic field provided additional enhancement in the CHF |
7. Conclusions and Future Direction
- The cooling performance of PFCs and HVs can be increased with the application of nanofluids. A very small amount of particle addition yields better heat transfer form PFCs and HVs. However, the mechanism of heat transfer enhancement is not properly known and still needs more investigation;
- The cooling of PFCs and HVs is mainly driven by boiling or two-phase heat transfer. The boiling in nanofluids depends on several factors and their combined effects. The addition of nanoparticles causes HTC and CHF enhancements in nanofluids, but excessive particle addition is detrimental and results in a decline in heat transfer, even lower than base fluid. Therefore, there is an optimum nanoparticle concentration that should be added for considerable heat transfer enhancement;
- The boiling heat transfer in nanofluid is controlled by the change in the topography and surface structure of the heating surface due to nanoparticle deposition activity. The change in the heating surface microstructure brings about changes in the surface characteristics such as wetting, roughness, and capillary wicking, which are very much responsible for heat transfer in nanofluids. The dominant nature of thermal conductivity enhancement and the development of active nucleation sites also play responsible roles in the heat transfer enhancement in nanofluids;
- The application of nanofluids particularly in fusion cooling is very limited. This may be due to the lesser understanding of the underlying complex phenomena in Hyper Vapotron technology. Therefore, more studies in this regard are critical. Besides this, Al2O3 nanofluids are frequently selected for cooling applications. However, other materials should be applied to reach any conclusion;
- Bubble formation and bubble dynamics are key mechanisms of the boiling heat transfer in nanofluids. More experiments should be conducted to understand these mechanisms properly;
- The effect of the pressure system on flow boiling in nanofluids has not been studied properly. Therefore, research on this topic needs serious attention. Boiling heat transfer on nanocoated surfaces also needs further attention in future research.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Grouping | Details |
---|---|
Research interest | Main focus of the study |
Research aim | Main objective of the paper |
Data type | Quantitative and qualitative categorization of data |
Research methodology | Categorization of methods: experimental, numerical, simulation, etc. |
Nomenclature of database | Collection of journals presenting nanofluids as reactor coolants and boiling such as pool boiling and flow boiling (two-phase flow) |
Year wise sourcing | Year wise journal publications |
References | Heating Surface | Nanofluids; Particle Size; Concentration | Surface Analysis | HTC or CHF Enhancement/Deterioration |
---|---|---|---|---|
You et al. [26] | Cu plate | Al2O3–water, SiO2–water | - | 200% enhancement in CHF |
Shoghl et al. [27] | SS cylinder (Ø10.67 × 99.1 mm2) | CuO–water and ZnO –water; 0.01–0.02% | SEM and AFM | HTC enhancement at low concentration and deterioration at high concentration |
Amiri et al. [28] | Heater (Ø15 × 75 mm) | CNT–water, <Ø60 nm × 15 mm; 0.01–0.1 wt.% | HTC enhancement for covalent nanofluid deterioration for non-covalent nanofluid; 274.2% enhancement in CHF | |
Huang et al. [29] | Nickel wire (Ø0.3 × 50 mm) | TiO2–water; 110–220 nm; 0.01 to 1 wt.% | SEM | Deterioration in HTC; 82.7% enhancement in CHF |
Wen et al. [30] | Cu plate (20 × 20 mm2) with rough and smooth surface | α-Al2O3–water; 20–150 nm 0.001–0.1 vol.% | SEM and AFM | Enhancement in HTC for smooth surface; HTC unchanged for rough surface; no data for CHF for both studies |
Harish et al. [31] | An aluminum disk with smooth and rough surface | Al2O3–water; <50 nm 0.5–2 vol.% | AFM | HTC enhanced only on rough surface; no report on CHF |
Sheikhbahai et al. [32] | Ni–Cr wire | Fe3O4–EG–water; <50 nm; 0.01–0.1 vol.% | SEM | HTC deteriorated; no report on CHF |
Kole et al. [33] | Cu block of 15 mm diameter | ZnO–EG; <50; 0.5–3.75 vol.% | Profilometer | 22% enhancement in HTC with 1.6 vol.%; no data for CHF |
Mourgues et al. [34] | SS disk of 15 mm diameter | ZnO–water; 0.01 vol.% | Photograph | HTC enhancement; 54% enhancement in CHF |
Sarafraz et al. [35] | Copper cylinder and honeycomb porous plate installed on it (Ø10, Ø30, Ø50) | TiO2–water; 21 nm; 0.0011 vol.% | - | HTC deteriorated; 220% enhancement in CHF |
Shahmoradi et al. [36] | Copper block of 38 mm diameter | Al2O3–water; 40 nm, 0.001–0.1 vol.% | AFM | 40% deterioration in HTC; 47% enhancement in CHF |
Vafaei et al. [37] | Copper substrate (20 × 20 mm2) | Al2O3–water; 0.001–0.1 vol.% | AFM and SEM | Enhancement in HTC |
Cieslinski et al. [38] | SS tube of outer dia 10 mm, 0.6 mm wall thickness | Al2O3–water; 5–250 nm; 0.01–1 wt.%, Cu–water; 7–257 nm; 0.01–1 wt% | TEM | HTC enhanced for smooth tubes; deteriorated for coated tube |
Niu et al. [39] | Copper heating block | Al2O3–water; 20 nm; 0.1 vol% CuO–water; 20 nm; 0.1 vol% | SEM | Enhancement in HTC |
Kamatchi et al. [40] | Ni–Cr wire | rGO–water; 0.01–0.3 g/L | XRD, SEM, and FT-IR | No report for HTC; 145–245% enhancement in CHF |
Sarafraz et al. [41] | Discoid copper heater of surface area 78 mm2 | CNT–water and FCNT–water; 10–20 nm diameter 1.5–2 μm length; 0.1–0.3 wt.% | TEM, XRD, and SEM | HTC deteriorated; CHF enhanced |
Sayahi et al. [42] | Cylindrical boiling vessel | γ-Al2O3–water;10 nm; 0.03 wt.% SiO2–water; 10–20 nm ; 0.03 wt% ZnO–water with SDS; 0.03 wt% | TEM, AFM | 56% enhancement in HTC with γ-Al2O3–water nanofluids; deterioration in HTC with SiO2–water nanofluids; 60% enhancement in HTC with ZnO–water with SDS |
Manetti et al. [43] | Cylindrical copper block (Ø20 × 60 mm2) | Al2O3–water;10 nm; 0.0007 vol.% and 0.007 vol.% | Roughness profiler | 75% enhancement in HTC with smooth surface; 15% enhancement in HTC for rough surface |
Sayantan et al. [44] | Rectangular Steel vessel (330 mm × 300 mm × 420 mm) | Al2O3–water, TiO2–water; 0.01–1 wt.% | Surface roughness profiler | HTC and CHF enhanced for lower concentrations, but decreased at higher concentrations |
Salimpour et al. [45] | Cylindrical copper block (Ø45 × 100 mm2) | Fe3O4–water; 0.1% and 0.5% vol. fraction | AFM | With rough surface, HTC reduced at low heat flux, but increased at high heat flux; with smooth surface, HTC increased at low heat flux and remained unchanged at high heat flux |
Li et al. [46] | Copper heating rod (100 mm long, 10–20 mm) | CuO–water; | - | 20–22% enhancement in HTC |
Kouloulias et al. [47] | Ni–Cr wire | Al2O3–water; 0.0012 and 0.0024 vol.% | SEM | - |
Etedali et al. [48] | Copper block (40 mm wide and 90 mm long) | Si–water with CTAB, Ps20 and SLS; 50 nm, 0.01–1 vol.% | Surface profiler | HTC significantly enhanced with surfactant addition |
References | Nanofluids; Particle Size (nm and µm) and Concentration | The Geometry and Material of the Test Section; Dimension/Diameter (mm); Length (mm) | Flow Parameters: Pressure System (kPa)/d (mm)/ q (kW/m2)/G (kg/ m2s) | Results of (HTC/CHF) of Flow Boiling Using Nanofluids |
---|---|---|---|---|
Afrand et al. [7] | TiO2–DI water; 20 and 40; 1–3 vol% Al2O3; 20 and 40; 1–3 vol% | Vertical and horizontal stainless steel circular tube; 10; 1000 | 150/37.5–705/137–412 | Degraded for both the vertical and horizontal tube with the presence of nanoparticles |
Sarafraz et al. [55] | MgO–Therminol; 66; 50; 0.1 and 0.3 mass% | Stainless steel chamber with a copper disk with horizontal surface; 10 (diameter of copper disk) | 101/30–700 | Improvement of about 23.7% for 0.1 mass%. |
Karimzadehkhouei et al. [56] | γAl2O3–distilled water; 20; 0.01–1.5 mass% | Horizontal stainless steel microtube; 0.502; 70 and 120 | 101/220–600/1200–3400 | Deteriorated with high concentration |
Hashemi et al. [57] | MWCNT–water; D = 10–20 nm and L = 30 µm; 0.001 and 0.01 mass% | Horizontal stainless steel circular tube; 10; 2000 | 101/60–200/320–920 | Improved for both water and nanofluids with increasing heat flux and mass flux/enhanced for flow boiling of nanofluid |
Choi et al. [58] | Fe3O4–DI water; 25; 0.01 vol% | Vertical stainless circular steel tube; 10.92; 250 | 100/1000–5000 | Enhanced up to 40% for nanofluid compared to water |
Rajabnia et al. [59] | TiO2–distilled water; 20; 0.01–0.5 vol% | Horizontal stainless steel circular tube; 10; 1000 | 101; 26–102; 138–308 | Deteriorated with nanoparticles for the two-phase regime (subcooled boiling flow) |
Paul et al. [60] | Al2O3–water; 26; 0.1; 0.3 vol% | Vertical stainless steel circular tube; 11.5; 1500 | 100; 0–2000; 125–453 | Enhanced with nanofluid compared to water, and this enhancement increased with the concentration of particles |
Zangeneh et al. [61] | ZnO–DI water; less than 50; 0.005–0.02 vol% | Vertical annulus channel; 20; 150 | 100; 8–110; 23–50 | Improved with ZnO–water nanofluids |
Sarafraz et al. [62] | CuO–DI water; 50; 0.1–0.3 mass% | Vertical stainless steel annular tube; 30; 300 | 101; 50–132; 0–400 | Improved with increasing mass flow rate of fluid |
Setoodeh et al. [63] | Al2O3–DI water; 20–30; 0.001–0.1 vol% | Aluminum circular surface in the bottom of Plexiglas channel; 12; 300 | 120; 0–5500; 490–880 | Augmented with surface roughness and mass flow rate |
Sarafraz and Hormozi [64] | CuO–DI water; 50; 0.1–0.3 mass% Al2O3; 50; 0.1–0.3 mass% MWCNT 0.1–0.3 mass% | Vertical annulus channel; 30; 300 | 100; 0–175; 400–1200 | Enhanced for MWCNT compared to other nanofluids with increasing mass and heat fluxes |
Rana et al. [65] | ZnO–water; 40; 0.001–0.01 vol% | Horizontal annulus made of borosilicate glass tube and stainless steel rod; 21.8; 500 | 101/21.8/500/405–710/100–550 | Enhanced with increasing concentration |
Lee et al. [66] | Al2O3, SiC–water; more or less than 50; 0.01 vol% | Vertical stainless round tube; 12.7(t); 500 | 101/12.7/500/100–250/100–3500 | Enhancement of 15% for Al2O3–water |
Vafaei and Wen [67] | Al2O3–water; 25; 0.001–0.1 vol% | Stainless steel microchannels; 0.51; 0.16(t); 306 | 101/0.51/306/600–1950/175 | Modest enhancement under very low concentrations |
Balasubramanian et al. [70] | Al2O3–DI water; 40–50; 0.01–0.1 vol% | 31 parallel U-shaped copper microchannels; 0.308; 30 | 101/1100–4450/100–800 | Enhanced during the transient state/enhanced up to 15% for moderate volume concentration |
Abedini et al. [71] | TiO2–DI water; 10 and 20; 0.1–2.5 vol% Al2O3–water; 10 and 20; 0.1–2.5 vol% CuO–water; 10 and 20; 0.1–2.5 vol% | Vertical stainless steel circular tube; 10; 1000 | 101/13–76.5/37–210 | Improved in single-phase regime and deteriorated with two-phase regime using nanofluids |
Patra et al. [72] | Al2O3–DI water; 20–25; 0.001–0.01 vol% TiO2; 30–38; 0.001–0.01 vol% | Vertical annulus channel; 33; 880 | 101/30–250/4–10 | Increased with dilute concentration |
Zhang et al. [73] | GO–water; 500–1000; 0–0.05 mass% | Horizontal copper microchannels; 2.5 width and 0.5 height | 101/0–100/0.04–0.07 | Decreased/enhanced |
Zhang et al. [74] | MWCNT–R123; D = 30–70 nm and L = 2–19 μm; 0.02–0.2 vol% | Horizontal copper circular tube; 9; 2000 | 100; (2*); 300–500 | Enhanced with increase concentration, mass flux, and vapor quality |
Tazarv et al. [75] | TiO2–R141b; 20; 0.01–0.3 vol% | 8.825; 2250 | 101; 1–28; 192–482 | Improved for nanorefrigerant compared to pure refrigerant |
Wang et al. [76] | γAl2O3–DI water; D = 20 nm and L = 50 nm; 0.1–0.5 vol% | Vertical stainless steel circular tube; 6; 1100 | 200–800; 50–300; 350–1100 | Enhanced using nanofluid |
Salari et al. [77] | Al2O3–DI water; (5, 50 and 80); 0.5–0.1 vol% | Vertical annulus channel; 30; 150 | 100; 0–85; 400–600 | Enhanced for short-time study and deteriorated for long-time study |
Soleimaniet al. [78] | Al2O3–DI water; 20–30; 0.1; 0.25 vol% | Plexiglas channel with rectangle shape; 20×30; 1200 | 120; 0–700; 400–850 | Enhanced using nanofluid |
Moreira et al. [79] | Al2O3–DI water; 20–30; 0.001–0.1 vol% | Horizontal stainless steel tube; 1.1; 200 | 101; 100–400; 200–600 | Improved with low concentration and decreased with high concentration |
Lee et al. [80] | Fe3O4–water; Al2O3–water; 20–30; 0.01–0.1 vol% | Vertical stainless tube; 10.92; 250 | 110/10.92/250/100–500/a | Enhanced drastically using Fe3O4–water |
Xu and Xu [81] | Al2O3–water; 40; 0.2 wt% | Microchannel test section made of Pyrex glass and silicon wafer; 0.143; 7.5 | 101/0.143/7.5/171–401/0–1000 | 17% enhancement |
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Mukherjee, S.; Ebrahim, S.; Mishra, P.C.; Ali, N.; Chaudhuri, P. A Review on Pool and Flow Boiling Enhancement Using Nanofluids: Nuclear Reactor Application. Processes 2022, 10, 177. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr10010177
Mukherjee S, Ebrahim S, Mishra PC, Ali N, Chaudhuri P. A Review on Pool and Flow Boiling Enhancement Using Nanofluids: Nuclear Reactor Application. Processes. 2022; 10(1):177. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr10010177
Chicago/Turabian StyleMukherjee, Sayantan, Shikha Ebrahim, Purna Chandra Mishra, Naser Ali, and Paritosh Chaudhuri. 2022. "A Review on Pool and Flow Boiling Enhancement Using Nanofluids: Nuclear Reactor Application" Processes 10, no. 1: 177. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr10010177
APA StyleMukherjee, S., Ebrahim, S., Mishra, P. C., Ali, N., & Chaudhuri, P. (2022). A Review on Pool and Flow Boiling Enhancement Using Nanofluids: Nuclear Reactor Application. Processes, 10(1), 177. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr10010177