Experimental and Numerical Study of Single Bubble Dynamics on a Hydrophobic Surface

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The growth and departure of single bubbles on two smooth surfaces with very different wettabilities are studied using high-speed video microscopy and numerical simulations. Isolated artificial cavities of approximately 10 Am diameter are microfabricated on both a bare and a Teflon-coated silicon substrate to serve as nucleation sites. The bubble departure diameter is observed to be almost 3 times larger and the growth period almost 60 times longer for the hydrophobic surface than for the hydrophilic surface. The waiting period is practically zero for the hydrophobic surface because a small residual bubble nucleus is left behind on the cavity from a previous ebullition cycle. The experimental results are consistent with our numerical simulation results. Bubble nucleation occurs on nominally smooth hydrophobic regions with root mean square roughness (R(q)) less than I run even at superheat as small as 3 degrees C. Liquid subcooling significantly affects bubble growth on the hydrophobic surface due to increased bubble surface area. Fundamental understanding of bubble dynamics on heated hydrophobic surfaces will facilitate the development of chemically patterned surfaces with enhanced boiling heat transfer performance and novel phase-change based micro-actuators and energy harvesters. [DOI: 10.1115/1.3216038]
Publisher
ASME-AMER SOC MECHANICAL ENG
Issue Date
2009-12
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Citation

JOURNAL OF HEAT TRANSFER-TRANSACTIONS OF THE ASME, v.131, no.12

ISSN
0022-1481
DOI
10.1115/1.3216038
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/286191
Appears in Collection
ME-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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