Abstract
Dielectric liquid spray cooling is a promising way to dissipate heat of high-power electronic devices. Surface modification is a most cost-effective method to enhance spray cooling. Inspired by leaf veins, this paper designs and fabricates macro-scale, micro- and nano- scale, and multi-scale structured surfaces for dielectric liquid spray cooling. The cooling characteristics are tested on a two-phase spray cooling system using HFE-7100. The results reveal that the heat transfer is enhanced on all the structured surfaces. Two bionic leaf vein structures, reticulated veins and parallel veins, are designed for macro-scale structured surfaces. The results show that the former one is superior to the other thanks to its better liquid distribution. For the micro- and nano- scale structured surfaces, due to the larger surface area and higher thermal conductivity, the graphene coating outperforms the carbon nanotube coating in heat transfer. Multi-scale structured surfaces, featured with leaf veins and micro- and nano- coatings, further enhance heat transfer. The heat flux increases by 116 % compared with that of the smooth surface. The evaporation efficiency reaches 60 % at the surface temperature of 80 °C. Furthermore, the effect of surface temperature on the enhancement ratio of heat transfer is analyzed, revealing various enhancement mechanisms of different scaled structured surfaces.
Published Version
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