Condensation on Hydrophilic, Hydrophobic, Nanostructured Superhydrophobic and Oil-Infused Surfaces

Color images of steady state water vapor condensing on smooth and nanostructured hydrophobic surfaces are presented. Figure 1a shows a snapshot of classical filmwise condensation on hydrophilic copper. A thin liquid film forms on the high surface energy substrate and acts as a conduction barrier for...

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Main Authors: Nenad, Miljkovic, Rong, Xiao, Ryan, Enright, Ian, McKay, Preston, Daniel John, Wang, Evelyn N., Miljkovic, Nenad, Xiao, Rong, Enright, Ryan, McKay, Ian
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Mechanical Engineering
Format: Article
Language:en_US
Published: ASME International 2014
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/84996
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7045-1200
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author Nenad, Miljkovic
Rong, Xiao
Ryan, Enright
Ian, McKay
Preston, Daniel John
Wang, Evelyn N.
Miljkovic, Nenad
Xiao, Rong
Enright, Ryan
McKay, Ian
author2 Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Mechanical Engineering
author_facet Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Mechanical Engineering
Nenad, Miljkovic
Rong, Xiao
Ryan, Enright
Ian, McKay
Preston, Daniel John
Wang, Evelyn N.
Miljkovic, Nenad
Xiao, Rong
Enright, Ryan
McKay, Ian
author_sort Nenad, Miljkovic
collection MIT
description Color images of steady state water vapor condensing on smooth and nanostructured hydrophobic surfaces are presented. Figure 1a shows a snapshot of classical filmwise condensation on hydrophilic copper. A thin liquid film forms on the high surface energy substrate and acts as a conduction barrier for heat transfer. Figure 1b shows dropwise condensation on a copper tube made hydrophobic via deposition of a tri-chloro silane (TFTS). Discrete droplets form on the surface and, upon reaching a size comparable to the capillary length (≈2.7 mm), depart from the surface by gravitational sweeping. Figure 1c shows jumping-droplet condensation on a nanostructured superhydrophobic copper oxide (CuO) surface. When droplets coalesce on this surface, the resulting droplet can jump due to the release of excess surface energy (Figure 2b), and as a result, rapid droplet jumping is observed at micrometric length scales (R < 20 μm). Figure 1d shows a novel mode of condensation called ‘immersion’ condensation, where nucleation density is drastically increased while maintaining easy condensate removal (R < 500 μm) and low contact angles (<120˚). This approach utilizes an oil-infused nanostructured CuO surface with a heterogeneous coating which allows droplets to nucleate immersed within the oil (Figure 2c). The increase in nucleation density is achieved due to the combined effect of surface energy heterogeneity and a reduced oil-water interfacial energy. Figure 2a shows a schematic of the experimental setup. The visualizations provide insight into the complex droplet-surface interactions, which are important for the development of enhanced phase change surfaces. If designed properly, these surfaces not only allow for easy droplet removal at micrometric length scales during condensation but also promise to enhance heat transfer performance.
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spelling mit-1721.1/849962022-09-28T12:18:06Z Condensation on Hydrophilic, Hydrophobic, Nanostructured Superhydrophobic and Oil-Infused Surfaces Nenad, Miljkovic Rong, Xiao Ryan, Enright Ian, McKay Preston, Daniel John Wang, Evelyn N. Miljkovic, Nenad Xiao, Rong Enright, Ryan McKay, Ian Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Mechanical Engineering Miljkovic, Nenad Miljkovic, Nenad Xiao, Rong Enright, Ryan McKay, Ian Preston, Daniel John Wang, Evelyn N. Color images of steady state water vapor condensing on smooth and nanostructured hydrophobic surfaces are presented. Figure 1a shows a snapshot of classical filmwise condensation on hydrophilic copper. A thin liquid film forms on the high surface energy substrate and acts as a conduction barrier for heat transfer. Figure 1b shows dropwise condensation on a copper tube made hydrophobic via deposition of a tri-chloro silane (TFTS). Discrete droplets form on the surface and, upon reaching a size comparable to the capillary length (≈2.7 mm), depart from the surface by gravitational sweeping. Figure 1c shows jumping-droplet condensation on a nanostructured superhydrophobic copper oxide (CuO) surface. When droplets coalesce on this surface, the resulting droplet can jump due to the release of excess surface energy (Figure 2b), and as a result, rapid droplet jumping is observed at micrometric length scales (R < 20 μm). Figure 1d shows a novel mode of condensation called ‘immersion’ condensation, where nucleation density is drastically increased while maintaining easy condensate removal (R < 500 μm) and low contact angles (<120˚). This approach utilizes an oil-infused nanostructured CuO surface with a heterogeneous coating which allows droplets to nucleate immersed within the oil (Figure 2c). The increase in nucleation density is achieved due to the combined effect of surface energy heterogeneity and a reduced oil-water interfacial energy. Figure 2a shows a schematic of the experimental setup. The visualizations provide insight into the complex droplet-surface interactions, which are important for the development of enhanced phase change surfaces. If designed properly, these surfaces not only allow for easy droplet removal at micrometric length scales during condensation but also promise to enhance heat transfer performance. 2014-02-19T14:17:43Z 2014-02-19T14:17:43Z 2013-07 2013-03 Article http://purl.org/eprint/type/JournalArticle 0022-1481 http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/84996 Nenad, Miljkovic et al. “Condensation on Hydrophilic, Hydrophobic, Nanostructured Superhydrophobic and Oil-Infused Surfaces.” Journal of Heat Transfer 135.8 (2013): 080906. https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7045-1200 en_US http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/1.4024188 Journal of Heat Transfer Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ application/pdf ASME International Nenad Miljkovic
spellingShingle Nenad, Miljkovic
Rong, Xiao
Ryan, Enright
Ian, McKay
Preston, Daniel John
Wang, Evelyn N.
Miljkovic, Nenad
Xiao, Rong
Enright, Ryan
McKay, Ian
Condensation on Hydrophilic, Hydrophobic, Nanostructured Superhydrophobic and Oil-Infused Surfaces
title Condensation on Hydrophilic, Hydrophobic, Nanostructured Superhydrophobic and Oil-Infused Surfaces
title_full Condensation on Hydrophilic, Hydrophobic, Nanostructured Superhydrophobic and Oil-Infused Surfaces
title_fullStr Condensation on Hydrophilic, Hydrophobic, Nanostructured Superhydrophobic and Oil-Infused Surfaces
title_full_unstemmed Condensation on Hydrophilic, Hydrophobic, Nanostructured Superhydrophobic and Oil-Infused Surfaces
title_short Condensation on Hydrophilic, Hydrophobic, Nanostructured Superhydrophobic and Oil-Infused Surfaces
title_sort condensation on hydrophilic hydrophobic nanostructured superhydrophobic and oil infused surfaces
url http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/84996
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7045-1200
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