This is a neat solution and yes condenser surfaces truly matter. My
interest is around my proposed Eden Machine which will use local
energy to operate a condenser plate. This is a necessary key
component that is now nicely optimized. It will nicely reduce
surface area.
Again it is a result of creating a micro surface to increase
efficiencies in a novel manner.
We are a long way from fully exploring this lode.
A better way to
shed water
by David L. Chandler for MIT News
Cambridge, MA (SPX) Oct 23, 2012
Condensers
are a crucial part of today's power generation systems: About 80
percent of all the world's powerplants use them to turn steam back to
water after it comes out of the turbines that turn generators. They
are also a key element in desalination plants, a fast-growing
contributor to the world's supply of fresh water.
Now, a new surface
architecture designed by researchers at MIT holds the promise of
significantly boosting the performance of such condensers.
The key to the
improved hydrophobic (water-shedding) surface is a combination of
microscopic patterning - a surface covered with tiny bumps or
posts just 10 micrometers (millionths of a meter) across, about the
size of a red blood cell - and a coating of a lubricant, such as oil.
The tiny spaces between the posts hold the oil in place through
capillary action, the researchers found.
The team discovered
that droplets of water condensing on this surface moved 10,000
times faster than on surfaces with just the hydrophobic patterning.
The speed of this
droplet motion is key to allowing the droplets to fall from the
surface so that new ones can form, increasing the efficiency of heat
transfer in a powerplant condenser, or the rate of water production
in a desalination plant.
With this new
treatment, "drops can glide on the surface," Varanasi
says, floating like pucks on an air-hockey table and looking like
hovering UFOs - a behavior Varanasi says he has never seen in more
than a decade of work on hydrophobic surfaces. "These are just
crazy velocities."
The amount of
lubricant required is minimal: It forms a thin coating, and is
securely pinned in place by the posts. Any lubricant that is lost is
easily replaced from a small reservoir at the edge of the surface.
The lubricant can
be designed to have such low vapor pressure that, Varanasi says, "You
can even put it in a vacuum, and it won't evaporate."
Another advantage of
the new system is that it doesn't depend on any particular
configuration of the tiny textures on the surface, as long as they
have about the right dimensions. "It can be manufactured
easily," Varanasi says.
After the surface is
textured, the material can be mechanically dipped in the lubricant
and pulled out; most of the lubricant simply drains off, and "only
the liquid in the cavities is held in by capillary forces,"
Anand says.
Because the coating is
so thin, he says, it only takes about a quarter- to a half-teaspoon
of lubricant to coat a square yard of the material. The lubricant can
also protect the underlying metal surface from corrosion.
Varanasi
plans further research to quantify exactly how much improvement is
possible by using the new technique in powerplants. Because
steam-powered turbines are ubiquitous in the world's fossil-fuel
powerplants, he says, "even if it saves 1 percent, that's huge"
in its potential impact on global emissions of greenhouse gases.
The new approach works
with a wide variety of surface textures and lubricants, the
researchers say; they plan to focus ongoing research on finding
optimal combinations for cost and durability. "There's a lot of
science in how you design these liquids and textures," Varanasi
says.
Daniel Beysens,
research director of the Physics and Mechanics of Heterogeneous Media
Laboratory at ESPCI in Paris, says the concept behind using a
lubricant liquid trapped by a nanopatterned surface, is "simple
and beautiful. The drops will nucleate and then slide down quite
easily. And it works!"
That further research
will be aided by a new technique Varanasi has developed in
collaboration with researchers including Konrad Rykaczewski, an MIT
research scientist currently based at the National Institute of
Standards and Technology (NIST) in Gaithersberg, Md., along with John
Henry Scott and Marlon Walker of NIST and Trevan Landin of FEI
Company. That technique is described in a separate paper also just
published in ACS Nano.
For the first time,
this new technique obtains direct, detailed images of the interface
between a surface and a liquid, such as droplets that condense on it.
Normally, that interface - the key to understanding wetting and
water-shedding processes - is hidden from view by the droplets
themselves, Varanasi explains, so most analysis has relied on
computer modeling. In the new process, droplets are rapidly frozen in
place on the surface, sliced in cross-section with an ion beam, and
then imaged using a scanning electron microscope.
"The method
relies on preserving the geometry of the samples through rapid
freezing in liquid-nitrogen slush at minus 210 degrees Celsius [minus
346 degrees Fahrenheit]," Rykaczewski says. "The freezing
rate is so fast (about 20,000 degrees Celsius per second) that water
and other liquids do not crystalize, and their geometry is
preserved."
The technique could be
used to study many different interactions between liquids or gases
and solid surfaces, Varanasi says. "It's a completely new
technique. For the first time, we're able to see these details of
these surfaces."
The enhanced
condensation research received funding from the National Science
Foundation (NSF), the Masdar-MIT Energy Initiative program, and the
MIT Deshpande Center. The direct imaging research used NIST
facilities, with funding from an NSF grant and the Dupont-MIT
Alliance.
The research is
described in a paper just published online in the journal ACS Nano by
MIT postdoc Sushant Anand; Kripa Varanasi, the Doherty Associate
Professor of Ocean Utilization; and graduate student Adam Paxson,
postdoc Rajeev Dhiman and research affiliate Dave Smith, all of
Varanasi's research group at MIT.
The research is
described in a paper just published online in the journal
ACS Nano by MIT postdoc Sushant Anand; Kripa Varanasi, the Doherty
Associate Professor of Ocean Utilization; and graduate student Adam
Paxson, postdoc Rajeev Dhiman and research affiliate Dave Smith, all
of Varanasi's research group at MIT.
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