Abstract

In this research the performances of nitrogen cryogenic heat pipes with different wick structures were compared under the condition of a wide range of heat load and several filling ratios. The heat pipes tested are commercially available ones, which were originally designed for room temperature applications using water as a working fluid. For the present research, working fluid, water, was replaced by liquid nitrogen. Heat pipe samples with three types of wicks, namely, axial grooves (G), sintered metal (S), and the combination of them (SG), were tested for comparing the thermal performance of the heat pipes with different wick structures, which is characterized by the effective thermal resistance Rth . The experimental data of the maximum heat transport capability Qmax was compared with theoretical predictions on the basis of the capillary limit for each wick structure. Under high filling ratio condition, wide range of heat load was supplied to investigate the variation of the thermal resistance including such operations as dry-out state and the state where liquid puddle was formed in the pipe. The result indicates that the thermal performances of heat pipes with three kinds of wick structures are ordered as follows in descending order; SG, S and G wick.

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