A Review on the Thermophysical Properties of Water-Based Nanofluids and their Hybrids
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Dată
2016Autor
Minea, Alina Adriana
Abstract
A nanofluid is a solid–liquid mixture which consists of nanoparticles and a
base liquid. Nanoparticles are basically metal (Cu, Ni, Al, etc.), oxides (Al2O3,
TiO2, CuO, SiO2, Fe2O3, Fe3O4, BaTiO3, etc.) and some other compounds (SiC,
CaCO3, graphene, etc.) and base fluids usually include water, ethylene glycol,
propylene glycol, engine oil, etc. Conventional fluids have poor heat transfer
properties but their vast applications in power generation, chemical processes,
heating and cooling processes, electronics and other micro-sized applications make
the re-processing of those thermo fluids to have better heat transfer properties quite
essential. Recently, it has been shown that the addition of solid nanoparticles to
various fluids can increase the thermal conductivity and can influence the viscosity
of the suspensions by tens of percent. The thermophysical properties of nanofluids
were shown dependent on the particle material, shape, size, concentration, the type
of the base fluid, and other additives. Therefore, a comprehensive analysis has been
performed to evaluate the thermophysical properties of nanofluids due to variations
of nanoparticle volume concentration. Actually, it is shown that no model is able to
predict the thermophysical properties of nanofluids precisely in a broad range of
nanoparticle volume fraction. Also, a review on hybrid nanofluids is inserted, even
if the research is at the very beginning. As a conclusion, the results indicated that
further work is needed due to a large uncertainty in termophysical properties
method of estimation.
Colecții
- 2016 fascicula9 nr1 [10]