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Spatial Temperature Distribution of an Open Square Capillary Tube Wall during Passage of a Taylor Liquid Plug. / Gatapova, E. Ya; Khandekar, S.

в: Journal of Physics: Conference Series, Том 1369, № 1, 012003, 26.11.2019.

Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданияхстатья по материалам конференцииРецензирование

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Gatapova EY, Khandekar S. Spatial Temperature Distribution of an Open Square Capillary Tube Wall during Passage of a Taylor Liquid Plug. Journal of Physics: Conference Series. 2019 нояб. 26;1369(1):012003. doi: 10.1088/1742-6596/1369/1/012003

Author

Gatapova, E. Ya ; Khandekar, S. / Spatial Temperature Distribution of an Open Square Capillary Tube Wall during Passage of a Taylor Liquid Plug. в: Journal of Physics: Conference Series. 2019 ; Том 1369, № 1.

BibTeX

@article{a64debda8f0c4721a9a3c3f3a86832c1,
title = "Spatial Temperature Distribution of an Open Square Capillary Tube Wall during Passage of a Taylor Liquid Plug",
abstract = "Taylor plug/bubble flow is a predominant two-phase flow pattern occurring in several microfluidic devices such as in microchannel heat sinks, fuel cells, pulsating heat pipes, labon-chips, microreactors, etc. Such flows are characterized by an alternating sequence of liquid plug and gas bubbles, whose ensuing local transport characteristics (heat and mass transfer) are complex and still not fully understood. Presence of gas-liquid interfaces, thin-film dynamics, moving contact lines, wettability, contact angle hysteresis, are some of the physical phenomena involved in Taylor bubble flow systems that manifests into its complex transport characteristics. Understanding the local interfacial transport mechanism is of vital importance to develop a comprehensive model for micro-scale devices utilizing Taylor bubble flow. In this background, we probe locally into the local thermo-hydrodynamics of 'unit-cell' of Taylor plug flow, which is essentially an isolated liquid plug moving inside a mini square capillary copper tube (side = 2 mm), surrounded by gas from both its sides, and try discerning local evaporation dynamics, with the help of IR thermography. This study focuses on the interplay of conjugate conduction, local thin film hydrodynamics formed behind the moving liquid plug, and its subsequent evaporation. We obtain local temperature distribution in the meniscus region, as the plug moves through the capillary tube. As the cold plug passes through the tube, local temperatures drop drastically, the transient reaches the heater-tube interface a bit delayed and there the drop in temperature is modest. The study clearly reveals that there is a strong thermo-hydrodynamic coupling between the tube wall and the moving Taylor liquid plug.",
author = "Gatapova, {E. Ya} and S. Khandekar",
year = "2019",
month = nov,
day = "26",
doi = "10.1088/1742-6596/1369/1/012003",
language = "English",
volume = "1369",
journal = "Journal of Physics: Conference Series",
issn = "1742-6588",
publisher = "IOP Publishing Ltd.",
number = "1",
note = "5th International Workshop on Heat/Mass Transfer Advances for Energy Conservation and Pollution Control, IWHT 2019 ; Conference date: 13-08-2019 Through 16-08-2019",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Spatial Temperature Distribution of an Open Square Capillary Tube Wall during Passage of a Taylor Liquid Plug

AU - Gatapova, E. Ya

AU - Khandekar, S.

PY - 2019/11/26

Y1 - 2019/11/26

N2 - Taylor plug/bubble flow is a predominant two-phase flow pattern occurring in several microfluidic devices such as in microchannel heat sinks, fuel cells, pulsating heat pipes, labon-chips, microreactors, etc. Such flows are characterized by an alternating sequence of liquid plug and gas bubbles, whose ensuing local transport characteristics (heat and mass transfer) are complex and still not fully understood. Presence of gas-liquid interfaces, thin-film dynamics, moving contact lines, wettability, contact angle hysteresis, are some of the physical phenomena involved in Taylor bubble flow systems that manifests into its complex transport characteristics. Understanding the local interfacial transport mechanism is of vital importance to develop a comprehensive model for micro-scale devices utilizing Taylor bubble flow. In this background, we probe locally into the local thermo-hydrodynamics of 'unit-cell' of Taylor plug flow, which is essentially an isolated liquid plug moving inside a mini square capillary copper tube (side = 2 mm), surrounded by gas from both its sides, and try discerning local evaporation dynamics, with the help of IR thermography. This study focuses on the interplay of conjugate conduction, local thin film hydrodynamics formed behind the moving liquid plug, and its subsequent evaporation. We obtain local temperature distribution in the meniscus region, as the plug moves through the capillary tube. As the cold plug passes through the tube, local temperatures drop drastically, the transient reaches the heater-tube interface a bit delayed and there the drop in temperature is modest. The study clearly reveals that there is a strong thermo-hydrodynamic coupling between the tube wall and the moving Taylor liquid plug.

AB - Taylor plug/bubble flow is a predominant two-phase flow pattern occurring in several microfluidic devices such as in microchannel heat sinks, fuel cells, pulsating heat pipes, labon-chips, microreactors, etc. Such flows are characterized by an alternating sequence of liquid plug and gas bubbles, whose ensuing local transport characteristics (heat and mass transfer) are complex and still not fully understood. Presence of gas-liquid interfaces, thin-film dynamics, moving contact lines, wettability, contact angle hysteresis, are some of the physical phenomena involved in Taylor bubble flow systems that manifests into its complex transport characteristics. Understanding the local interfacial transport mechanism is of vital importance to develop a comprehensive model for micro-scale devices utilizing Taylor bubble flow. In this background, we probe locally into the local thermo-hydrodynamics of 'unit-cell' of Taylor plug flow, which is essentially an isolated liquid plug moving inside a mini square capillary copper tube (side = 2 mm), surrounded by gas from both its sides, and try discerning local evaporation dynamics, with the help of IR thermography. This study focuses on the interplay of conjugate conduction, local thin film hydrodynamics formed behind the moving liquid plug, and its subsequent evaporation. We obtain local temperature distribution in the meniscus region, as the plug moves through the capillary tube. As the cold plug passes through the tube, local temperatures drop drastically, the transient reaches the heater-tube interface a bit delayed and there the drop in temperature is modest. The study clearly reveals that there is a strong thermo-hydrodynamic coupling between the tube wall and the moving Taylor liquid plug.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85079353124&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1088/1742-6596/1369/1/012003

DO - 10.1088/1742-6596/1369/1/012003

M3 - Conference article

AN - SCOPUS:85079353124

VL - 1369

JO - Journal of Physics: Conference Series

JF - Journal of Physics: Conference Series

SN - 1742-6588

IS - 1

M1 - 012003

T2 - 5th International Workshop on Heat/Mass Transfer Advances for Energy Conservation and Pollution Control, IWHT 2019

Y2 - 13 August 2019 through 16 August 2019

ER -

ID: 23575713