Experimental analysis of temperature and vapor core pressure for an annular heat pipe Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • The main contribution of this study is the effects of the operating conditions on the internal vapor pressure and temperature in an annular screen wick heat pipe, using distilled water as the working fluid. High-resolution pressure transducers, optical fiber distributed temperature sensors, and K-type thermocouples were employed to measure the internal and external temperatures as well as the local static pressures at different axial positions of the heat pipe. Temporal and frequency analysis using a one-dimensional continuous wavelet transform was performed on the differential pressure data to characterize flow behavior and infer the flow regime occurring within the heat pipe. The heat pipe was tested in multiple orientations with respect to the horizon (=0,45, and 90), heat loads (25, 50, and 75W), and condenser coolant temperatures (Tw,in=10C, 20C, and 30C). To estimate the vapor-phase flow friction factor for multiple Reynolds numbers, the LockhartMartinelli correlation was employed. This study provides critical experimental data and analyses for complex two-phase flow behavior in an annular wick heat pipe geometry. The thermal resistance and effective thermal conductivity were estimated as a function of the heat pipe orientation and power input. The experimental investigation revealed that power input and orientation influence both the internal vapor core and external surface temperatures, as well as the local pressure response. The outcomes from this study provide a valuable database that supports the advancement of heat pipe design, modeling, and validation.

published proceedings

  • PHYSICS OF FLUIDS

author list (cited authors)

  • Orea, D., Anand, N. K., & Hassan, Y. A.

citation count

  • 2

complete list of authors

  • Orea, Daniel||Anand, NK||Hassan, Yassin A

publication date

  • September 2023