Abstract

This study examines the single-phase and two-phase cooling performance of a hybrid micro-channel/micro-jet impingement cooling scheme using HFE 7100 as working fluid. This scheme consists of supplying coolant from a series of jets that deposit liquid into the micro-channels. A single-phase numerical scheme that utilizes the k–ε turbulent model and a method for determining the extent of the laminarized wall layer shows very good predictions of measured wall temperatures. It is shown jet velocity has a profound influence on single-phase cooling performance. High jet velocities enable jet fluid to penetrate the axial micro-channel flow and produce a strong impingement effect at the wall. On the other hand, the influence of jets at low jet velocities is greatly compromised compared to the micro-channel flow. During nucleate boiling, vapor layer development along the micro-channel in the hybrid module is fundamentally different from that encountered in conventional micro-channels. Here, subcooled jet fluid produces repeated regions of bubble growth followed by bubble collapse, rather than the continuous growth common to conventional micro-channel flow. By reducing void fraction along the micro-channel, the hybrid scheme contributes greater wall temperature uniformity. Increasing subcooling and/or flow rate delay the onset of boiling to higher heat fluxes and higher wall temperatures, and also increase critical heat flux considerably. A nucleate boiling heat transfer coefficient correlation is developed that fits the present data with a mean absolute error of 6.10%.

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