Impact of the self-adaptive valve behavior on an array of microfluidic cells under unsteady and non-uniform heat load distributions

Author

Laguna Benet, Gerard

Vilarrubí, Montse

Ibáñez, Manuel

Rosell Urrutia, Joan Ignasi

Badia Pascual, Ferran

Azarkish, Hassan

Collin, Louis-Michel

Fréchette, L. G.

Barrau, Jérôme

Publication date

2019-03-21T13:09:11Z

2019-03-21T13:09:11Z

2019



Abstract

Selected papers from 17th International Days on Heat Transfer (JITH-2017), 2017


Previous studies have demonstrated that the performance of a cooling scheme based on a matrix of microfluidic cells with self-adaptive valves under unsteady and non-uniform heat load scenarios improves in terms of pumping power and temperature uniformity, compared to the ones from conventional microchannels and hybrid jet impingement/microchannel cooling devices. The behavior of the thermally dependent self-adaptive valves varies as a function of some design parameters. In this work, the impact of the valve’s characteristic curve on the cooling device is assessed to establish the basic rules for the valve design. The performance of a 3×3 microfluidic cell array is numerically studied under an unsteady and non-uniform heat load scenario. The results show that the valves which open at the most elevated temperature (control temperature of 90ºC) reduce by 15.5% the pumping power with respect to the valves opening at 60ºC, while improving by 25.0% the temperature uniformity and reducing both the overcooling and the fatigue.


The research leading to these results has been performed within the STREAMS project (www.project-streams.eu) and received funding from the European Community's Horizon 2020 program under Grant Agreement n° 688564.

Document Type

Article
Published version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Adaptive cooling; Temperature uniformity; Distributed cooling; Pumping power

Publisher

Regional Information Center for Science and Technology

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: http://jafmonline.net/JournalArchive/download?file_ID=49074&issue_ID=254

Journal of applied fluid mechanics, 2019, vol 12, Special Issue, p. 29-39

Info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/H2020/688564/EU/STREAMS

Rights

cc-by-nc-nd, (c) Laguna et al., 2019

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

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