Heat Transfer With Phase Change
Heat Transfer With Phase Change
Heat Transfer With Phase Change
6.1 Introduction
Heat transfer of a phase change coolant is much more complex than the previ-
ous modes of heat transfer that we have studied. By phase change we denote the
following processes:
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© Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht 1998
438 Chap. 6 Heat Transfer With Phase Change
a very large rate of heat transfer can be achieved with very little change in tem-
perature. This is one of the attractions of phase change heat transfer. Further-
more, in contrast to natural or forced convection, increasing the I1T may result
in a decrease in the heat transfer coefficient. Because of the number of variables,
there are no accurate general equations or correlations to use. Of the useable
equations, most have an empirical value that changes with the surface charac-
teristics and must be evaluated by experimentation . The accuracy of these cor-
relations without experimental verification may be 50%.
Although heat transfer by phase change is not yet widely used in electronics
cooling, as the component heat flux rises, the laws of physics dictate that high-
end cooling technologies will progress from air-cooled to liquid-cooled to phase
change. Our studies in this section will be largely theoretical, but in subsequent
chapters we will use these basic principles in heat pipes , and other practical
applications.