Abstract

Experiments were carried out to observe boiling behaviors of water on horizontal and vertical surfaces at pressures from 0.35 to 5 MPa. The growth curves of the primary bubbles are well described by the t1/2 variation over the whole range of pressures. The growth rates of primary bubbles are proportional to the square root of the Jakob number, and agree with the correlation by Labuntsov with the arbitrary constant β = 3. The conventional correlations of bubble growth rates, which are directly proportional to the Jakob number, predict slower growth rates at higher pressures. The coalescence behaviors of the primary bubbles were also measured on the vertical surface at 3.66 MPa. The coalesced bubbles, which were formed by the coalescence of two primary bubbles, grow at rates similar to the rates of the primary bubbles. The nucleation site densities measured on the vertical surface at pressures up to 5 MPa increase in proportion to about the 1.5th power of the pressure under equivalent heat flux conditions. The dependence of the nucleation site densities on the heat flux is very similar to the results obtained near atmospheric pressure where the nucleation site density is proportional to the 1.5th power of the heat flux. The nucleation site densities measured in the range of pressures of 0.35 to 5 MPa and at heat fluxes of 0.05 to 0.35MW/m2 agree fairly well with the available correlations.

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