Abstract

Nucleate boiling heat transfer and bubble dynamics in a thin liquid film on a horizontal rotating disk were studied. A series of experiments were conducted to determine the heat transfer coefficient on the disk. At low rotation and flow rates, vigorous boiling increased the heat transfer coefficients above those without boiling. Higher rotational speeds and higher flow rates increased the heat transfer coefficient and suppressed boiling by decreasing the superheat in the liquid film. The flow field on the disk, which included supercritical (thin film) flow upstream of a hydraulic jump, and subcritical (thick film) flow downstream of a hydraulic jump, affected the type of bubble growth. Three types of bubble growth were identified. Vigorous boiling with large, stationary bubbles were observed in the subcritical flow. Supercritical flow produced small bubbles that remained attached to the disk and acted as local obstacles to the flow. At low rotational rates, the hydraulic jump that separated the supercritical and subcritical regions produced hemispherical bubbles that protruded out of the water film surface and detached from the disk, allowing them to slide radially outward. A model of the velocity and temperature of the microlayer of water underneath these sliding bubbles indicated that the microlayer thickness was approximately 1/25th of that of the surrounding water film. This microlayer is believed to greatly enhance the heat transfer rate underneath the sliding bubbles.

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