Abstract

With liquid cold plates being widely applied in industries such as battery energy storage systems, advanced heat transfer enhancement technologies are urgently needed to efficiently dissipate the ever-increasing heat load. The present work numerically and experimentally explores the potential of flow intermittency in a laminar serpentine channel for thermal performance improvement. The numerical analysis shows that the dynamic Dean vortex evolution induced by the intermittent mainstream disrupts the thermal boundary layer more effectively than the steady-flow vortices and enhances local Nusselt number at the U-turns by 117% maximally. Such secondary vortices are transported intermittently to the straight segments, resulting in a 55% increase in the area-averaged heat transfer by promoting mainstream-boundary flow mixing. The optimization of the flow intermittency profile is achieved by matching the pulse-on and deceleration stage durations with the characteristic times of secondary vortex growth and transport. The numerical results are qualitatively validated by the experimental measurement conducted in a water bath. The current study novelly demonstrates the design concept of enhancing heat transfer in curved channels by actively controlling the intermittent flow and proposes the design criteria for the intermittency profile to achieve optimal performance.

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