Yuxuan Chen , Jianye Yang , Xiaokang Liu , Xiuliang Liu
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Vapor condensation is widely adopted in thermal management technology and condenser of energy power plant, benefiting from its high heat transfer coefficient. Contact angle is the key factor to regulate vapor condensation rate, leading to the rapid development of surfaces with various wettability fabricated by micro/nanoengineering. However, the nucleated nanodroplets (1–100 nm) at the beginning of condensation exhibit different wetting dynamics from macroscopic droplets, the mechanisms of which are not well understood. In this work, we perform molecular dynamic (MD) simulations to study the evolution of contact angle during nanodroplet nucleation processes. The results show the nucleated contact angle of a nanodroplet is smaller than the contact angle predicted by the classical Young equation on a hydrophobic surface, while it is opposite for nanodroplet nucleating on hydrophilic surface. Moreover, we have calculated line tension for the nucleated nanodroplet on the surfaces with different wettability to explain this discovery, and found positive line tension on hydrophobic surface, while negative line tension for nucleated nanodroplet on hydrophilic surface. Furthermore, the calculated line tension, which is at the order magnitude of 10−11 J/m, aligns well with the data documented in the literature.
期刊介绍:
The International Journal of Thermal Sciences is a journal devoted to the publication of fundamental studies on the physics of transfer processes in general, with an emphasis on thermal aspects and also applied research on various processes, energy systems and the environment. Articles are published in English and French, and are subject to peer review.
The fundamental subjects considered within the scope of the journal are:
* Heat and relevant mass transfer at all scales (nano, micro and macro) and in all types of material (heterogeneous, composites, biological,...) and fluid flow
* Forced, natural or mixed convection in reactive or non-reactive media
* Single or multi–phase fluid flow with or without phase change
* Near–and far–field radiative heat transfer
* Combined modes of heat transfer in complex systems (for example, plasmas, biological, geological,...)
* Multiscale modelling
The applied research topics include:
* Heat exchangers, heat pipes, cooling processes
* Transport phenomena taking place in industrial processes (chemical, food and agricultural, metallurgical, space and aeronautical, automobile industries)
* Nano–and micro–technology for energy, space, biosystems and devices
* Heat transport analysis in advanced systems
* Impact of energy–related processes on environment, and emerging energy systems
The study of thermophysical properties of materials and fluids, thermal measurement techniques, inverse methods, and the developments of experimental methods are within the scope of the International Journal of Thermal Sciences which also covers the modelling, and numerical methods applied to thermal transfer.