Abstract

Fluids near their liquid-vapor critical point, liquid mixtures near their miscibility critical point, exhibit universal behavior in their transport properties. Weightlessness is most often mandatory to properly evidence these properties. This review is concerned with some of the most important results obtained thanks to space experiments concerning thermal, mass, and momentum transport. Thermal aspects in pure fluids are mainly concerned with the discovery of a new thermalization process, the Piston Effect, leading to paradoxical effects such as a “critical speeding up” instead of the classical “critical slowing down”, heat seemingly flowing backwards and cooling resulting from heating. Mass transport deals with the process of boiling in the liquid phase, and phase transition when the fluid or the liquid mixture is thermally quenched from the homogeneous, supercritical region, to the two-phase region where it phase separates. Weightlessness makes universal the dynamics of phase separation. Momentum transport is concerned with the scaled behavior of viscosity and the effects of vibrations. Vibrations lead to effects (interface position, instabilities) that resemble buoyancy effects seemingly caused by an artificial gravity. Although weightlessness has led to solve important problems, many questions are still opened.

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