LAPSE:2023.34156
Published Article
LAPSE:2023.34156
Influence of Acetone and Sodium Chloride Additives on Cooling Efficiency of Water Droplets Impinging onto Hot Metal Surfaces
Joachim Søreng Bjørge, Svein Arne Bjørkheim, Maria-Monika Metallinou, Torgrim Log, Øyvind Frette
April 25, 2023
In the present work, the cooling efficiency of water droplets falling onto hot aluminum and stainless steel discs from heights of 12.5 cm, 25 cm, 50 cm and 100 cm, corresponding to speeds of 1.5 m/s, 2.2 m/s, 3.1 m/s and 4.4 m/s, respectively, were studied. The discs were aligned at 0° (horizontal), 30° and 60° inclination. The water application rate was 0.022 g/s and the droplet diameters studied were 2.5 mm, 3.2 mm and 3.7 mm. Acetone solutions (300 ppm and 700 ppm) as well as a NaCl (35 g/kg) solution, emulating seawater, were tested to evaluate the influence of an active surfactant on the recorded cooling efficiency. The droplets with higher impact speed resulted in lower cooling efficiency, especially at disc temperatures above the Leidenfrost temperature, likely due to more vigorous droplets bouncing. Larger inclination did, as expected, result in lower cooling efficiency. At temperatures associated with nucleate boiling, the water droplets with NaCl conspicuously displayed higher cooling efficiency at about 110 °C. However, at temperatures between 120 °C and the Leidenfrost temperature, acetone and NaCl additives did not significantly alter the cooling efficiency of the water droplets. Above the Leidenfrost temperature, a minor increase in cooling efficiency was observed for the acetone solutions. Overall, the additives only marginally changed the water droplet cooling efficiency. The standard industrial water application rate (i.e., 10 L/min∙m2) is shown to be insufficient compared to the heat fluxes expected in pool and jet fires (i.e., 250 kW/m2 and 350 kW/m2, respectively).
Keywords
acetone, hot metals, NaCl, water droplet cooling efficiency
Subject
Suggested Citation
Bjørge JS, Bjørkheim SA, Metallinou MM, Log T, Frette Ø. Influence of Acetone and Sodium Chloride Additives on Cooling Efficiency of Water Droplets Impinging onto Hot Metal Surfaces. (2023). LAPSE:2023.34156
Author Affiliations
Bjørge JS: Q Rådgivning AS/PDS Protek, Øvregata 126, 5527 Haugesund, Norway; Department of Physics and Technology, University of Bergen, 5020 Bergen, Norway
Bjørkheim SA: Omega Areal AS, Kvassanesvegen 4, 5582 Ølensvåg, Norway
Metallinou MM: Western Norway University of Applied Sciences, Fire Disaster Research Group, 5528 Haugesund, Norway
Log T: Western Norway University of Applied Sciences, Fire Disaster Research Group, 5528 Haugesund, Norway [ORCID]
Frette Ø: Department of Physics and Technology, University of Bergen, 5020 Bergen, Norway
[Login] to see author email addresses.
Journal Name
Energies
Volume
12
Issue
12
Article Number
E2358
Year
2019
Publication Date
2019-06-19
Published Version
ISSN
1996-1073
Version Comments
Original Submission
Other Meta
PII: en12122358, Publication Type: Journal Article
Record Map
Published Article

LAPSE:2023.34156
This Record
External Link

doi:10.3390/en12122358
Publisher Version
Download
Files
[Download 1v1.pdf] (3.9 MB)
Apr 25, 2023
Main Article
License
CC BY 4.0
Meta
Record Statistics
Record Views
65
Version History
[v1] (Original Submission)
Apr 25, 2023
 
Verified by curator on
Apr 25, 2023
This Version Number
v1
Citations
Most Recent
This Version
URL Here
https://psecommunity.org/LAPSE:2023.34156
 
Original Submitter
Auto Uploader for LAPSE
Links to Related Works
Directly Related to This Work
Publisher Version