Abstract

The evaporation of water droplets on a solid surface at elevated temperatures under a pressurized condition has not yet been well understood, although this phenomenon is of both theoretical and practical significance. In this work, water droplet evaporation on smooth stainless steel surfaces in nitrogen gas atmosphere at elevated pressures and temperatures (up to 2 MPa and 202.4 °C, respectively) was investigated experimentally. It was observed that the increase in pressure diminishes the proportion of the constant contact radius stage over the entire evaporation time, whereas an opposite trend was found when raising the temperature, due to the change in the surface pinning ability with pressure (and temperature). The results also suggested that the evaporation mode transition is mainly affected by temperature rather than pressure. In addition, the evaporation rate was calculated under various degrees of subcooling, revealing that the evaporation rate increases almost linearly with pressure when keeping the degree of subcooling constant. However, when fixing the test temperature, a nonlinear decrease of the evaporation rate with pressure was observed. A power law growth of the evaporation rate with temperature was also found at a constant pressure. Last, it was uncovered by a theoretical analysis that the saturated vapor concentration is the dominant factor dictating the evaporation rate.

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