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Frost nucleation and growth on hydrophilic, hydrophobic, and biphilic surfacesVan Dyke, Alexander Scott January 1900 (has links)
Master of Science / Department of Mechanical and Nuclear Engineering / Amy R. Betz / The purpose of this research was to test if biphilic surfaces mitigate frost and ice formation. Frost, which forms when humid air comes into contact with a surface that is below the dew point and freezing temperature of water, hinders engineering systems such as aeronautics, refrigeration systems, and wind turbines. Most previous research has investigated increasingly superhydrophobic materials to delay frost formation; however, these materials are dependent on fluctuating operating conditions and surface roughness. Therefore, the hypothesis for this research was that a biphilic surface would slow the frost formation process and create a less dense frost layer, and water vapor would preferentially condense on hydrophilic areas, thus controlling where nucleation initially occurs. Preferential nucleation can control the size, shape, and location of frost nucleation. To fabricate biphilic surfaces, a hydrophobic material was coated on a silicon wafer, and a pattern of hydrophobic material was removed using photolithography to reveal hydrophilic silicon-oxide. Circles were patterned at various pitches and diameters. The heat sink was comprised of two parts: a solid bottom half and a finned upper half. Half of the heat sink was placed inside a polyethylene base for insulation. Tests were conducted in quiescent air at room temperature, 22 °C, and two relative humidities, 30% and 60%. Substrate temperatures were held constant throughout all tests. All tests showed a trend that biphilic surfaces suppress freezing temperature more effectively than plain hydrophilic or hydrophobic surfaces; however, no difference between pattern orientation or size was noticed for maximum freezing temperature. However, the biphilic patterns did affect other aspects such as time to freezing and volume of water on the surface. These effects are from the patterns altering the nucleation and coalescence behavior of condensation.
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Modeling And Performance Evaluation Of An Organic Rankine Cycle (orc) With R245fa As Working FluidBamgbopa, Musbaudeen Oladiran 01 July 2012 (has links) (PDF)
This thesis presents numerical modelling and analysis of a solar Organic Rankine Cycle
(ORC) for electricity generation. A regression based approach is used for the working fluid
property calculations. Models of the unit&rsquo / s sub-components (pump, evaporator, expander
and condenser) are also established. Steady and transient models are developed and
analyzed because the unit is considered to work with stable (i.e. solar + boiler) or variable
(i.e. solar only) heat input. The unit&rsquo / s heat exchangers (evaporator and condenser) have
been identified as critical for the applicable method of analysis (steady or transient). The
considered heat resource into the ORC is in the form of solar heated water, which varies
between 80-95 0C at a range of mass flow rates between 2-12 kg/s. Simulation results of
steady state operation using the developed model shows a maximum power output of
around 40 kW. In the defined operation range / refrigerant mass flow rate, hot water mass
flow rate and hot water temperature in the system are identified as critical parameters to
optimize the power production and the cycle efficiency. The potential benefit of controlling
these critical parameters is demonstrated for reliable ORC operation and optimum power
production. It is also seen that simulation of the unit&rsquo / s dynamics using the transient model is
imperative when variable heat input is involved, due to the fact that maximum energy
recovery is the aim with any given level of heat input.
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Improved Thermoregulation Of Brain Temperature Using Phase Change Material-Mediated Head Cooling SystemRakkimuthu, Sathyaprabha January 2020 (has links)
No description available.
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