Effects of the Working Fluid Nature and the Capillary Structure on the Thermal Capacity of a Heat Pipe

Authors

  • Salim DAHAMNI LCEMSM Laboratory, Hassiba Benbouali University of Chlef, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Hay Essalem, Chlef, 02000, Algeria.
  • Hayet GUETARNI LCEMSM Laboratory, Hassiba Benbouali University of Chlef, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Hay Essalem, Chlef, 02000, Algeria.
  • Abdallah BENAROUS Saâd Dahlab University of Blida1, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Route de Soumâa, Blida, 09000, Algeria.

Keywords:

Electronics cooling, Heat pipe, Heat transfer limit, Working fluid, Capillary structure

Abstract

Heat pipes have applications in several areas of thermal engineering, including electronic components to spacecraft thrust chamber exchangers. Although they can transfer large amounts of heat over a spatially restricted interval, they exhibit several operating limitations. The properties of the working fluid, the capillary structure, the orientation of the pipe, the length and the diameter of the pipe, are parameters that affect these limits. The present study aims to numerically evaluate the heat transfer capacity of a heat pipe. A one-dimensional model is developed considering water, ammonia and sodium as working fluids. The capillary structure is taken to be a
wire mesh wick or a square groove, for which several operating thermal ranges are investigated. A comparative study for different properties of heat pipes has been performed using the Matlab® software.

Published

12/19/2022

How to Cite

DAHAMNI, S., GUETARNI, H., & BENAROUS, A. (2022). Effects of the Working Fluid Nature and the Capillary Structure on the Thermal Capacity of a Heat Pipe. Revue Nature Et Technologie, 12(02), 28–38. Retrieved from https://journals.univ-chlef.dz/index.php/natec/article/view/77

Issue

Section

Fundamental & Engineering Sciences

Similar Articles

<< < 1 2 

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.