Abstract:
The growing demand for energy worldwide requires attention to the design and operating of
heat exchangers and thermal devices to utilise and save thermal energy. There is a need to
find new heat transport fluids with better heat transfer properties to increase convective heat
transfer, and nanofluids are good alternatives to conventional heat transport fluids. Although
extensive research has been done on the properties of nanofluids in recent decades, there is
still a lack of research on convection heat transfer involving nanofluids, particularly in the
transitional flow regime. This study focused on the application of nanofluids in heat
exchangers as heat transport fluids by investigating forced convective heat transfer of
alumina-water and titanium dioxide-water nanofluids prepared by using the one-step method.
The particle size used was 46 nm and 42 nm for the aluminium oxide and the titanium
dioxide respectively. Uniform heat flux boundary conditions were used by uniformly heating
the rectangular channel electrically. Nanofluids with volume concentrations of 0.3, 0.5 and
1% were used for the alumina-water nanofluids, and volume concentrations of 0.3, 0.5, 0.7
and 1% were used for the titanium dioxide-water nanofluids. The viscosity of the nanofluids
under investigation was determined experimentally, while the thermal conductivity and other
properties were predicted by using suitable correlations from the literature. A Reynolds
number range of 200 to 7 000 was covered, and the investigated flow rates included the
laminar and turbulent flow regimes, as well as the transition regime from laminar to turbulent
flow. Temperatures and pressure drops were measured to evaluate heat transfer coefficients,
Nusselt numbers and pressure drop coefficients. Heat transfer and hydrodynamic
characteristics in the transition flow regime were carefully studied and compared with those
in the transition regime when flowing pure water in the same test section. The study also investigated another approach of enhancing heat transfer in heat exchangers
by increasing the heat transfer area of the heat exchanger itself, and this was done by filling
the rectangular test section with porous media to increase the heat transfer surface area and
thus enhance heat transfer. Hence in this study, the effect of using porous media was also
studied by filling the rectangular test section with high-porosity nickel foam. The
permeability of the used nickel foam was determined by conducting pressure drop
measurements through the nickel foam in the test section, and heat transfer and pressure drop
parameters were measured and compared with those in the empty test section.
The results showed that all the nanofluids used enhanced heat transfer, particularly in the
transition flow regime. The 1.0% volume concentration alumina nanofluid showed maximum
enhancement of the heat transfer coefficient, with values of 54% and 11% in the turbulent
regime. The maximum enhancement of the heat transfer coefficient was 29.3% in the
transition regime for the 1.0% volume concentration titanium dioxide-water nanofluid. The
thermal performance factor in the transition flow regime was observed to be better than that
in the turbulent and laminar flow regimes for all the nanofluids.
The results of the nickel foam test section showed that the values of the friction coefficient
were 24.5 times higher than the values of the empty test section, and the Nusselt number was
observed to be three times higher when using nickel foam than without foam in the test
section. No transition regime was observed for the foam-filled test section on either the heat
transfer results or the pressure drop results; however, transition from laminar to turbulent was
found for the test section without foam. The results of the thermal factor of the foam-filled
test section showed a thermal performance factor higher than unity through the entire
Reynolds number range of 2 000 to 6 500, with better thermal performance factor at lower
Reynolds number.