화학공학소재연구정보센터
International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, Vol.54, No.15-16, 3440-3447, 2011
Evaporative heat and mass transfer from the free surface of a liquid wicked into a bed of spheres
Evaporation of ethanol from square packed arrays of 3.95 mm diameter copper spheres in a transparent, enclosed chamber is investigated. The enclosure ensures that relatively saturated vapor conditions exist near the free surface. The desired heat flux is imposed on the copper substrate upon which the copper spheres are mounted, and the liquid level in the bed is maintained by wicking from a continuous supply of liquid provided by a syringe pump. Transparent windows in the enclosure allow for visualization of the evaporating liquid meniscus shape, which is recorded for different liquid feeding rates and heat fluxes. Experimentally measured meniscus profiles are compared to analytical results based on surface-energy minimization. A meniscus microregion is defined from the contact line to the length where the liquid thickness reaches 10 mu m. An approximate kinetic theory-based analysis estimates that up to similar to 55% of the total meniscus mass transfer occurs in this microregion. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.