Bubble incipience in artificial cavities manufactured from silicon has been studied using gas nucleation and pool boiling. Moderately wetting water and highly wetting ethanol have both been used as the bulk fluid with cylindrical cavities, as well as those with a triangle, square, and rectangle shape cross section. Nominal cavity sizes range from . The incipience conditions observed for water using both gas nucleation and pool boiling suggest that bubble initiation originates from a concave meniscus. Cornwell’s contact angle hysteresis theory for vapor-trapping cavities is used to explain the gas nucleation results. The pool boiling results are more difficult to explain. Using ethanol, cavities appeared to be completely flooded and were not activated using either gas nucleation or pool boiling. Using water and gas nucleation, cavities were almost always activated, provided the incipience criterion was satisfied; in contrast cavities in pool boiling with water activated with different superheats during different experiments. The difference in incipience behavior between gas nucleation and pool boiling with water is explained based on vapor-trapping and thermal suppression considerations. Based on limited experimental results, it appears that the backpressure does not influence gas bubble incipience, provided the pressure difference is the same. The experimental results presented affirm the theory of heterogeneous nucleation from vapor-trapping cavities provided contact angle hysteresis and vapor trapping are fully accounted for. However, the results also suggest that the theoretical considerations required for a deterministic model for incipience from vapor-trapping cavities during boiling is more complex than previously hypothesized.
Skip Nav Destination
e-mail: klaus@ufl.edu
Article navigation
November 2005
This article was originally published in
Journal of Heat Transfer
Technical Papers
Heterogeneous Nucleation With Artificial Cavities
Yusen Qi,
Yusen Qi
Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering,
University of Florida
, P.O. Box 116300, Gainesville, FL 32611-6300
Search for other works by this author on:
James F. Klausner
James F. Klausner
Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering,
e-mail: klaus@ufl.edu
University of Florida
, P.O. Box 116300, Gainesville, FL 32611-6300
Search for other works by this author on:
Yusen Qi
Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering,
University of Florida
, P.O. Box 116300, Gainesville, FL 32611-6300
James F. Klausner
Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering,
University of Florida
, P.O. Box 116300, Gainesville, FL 32611-6300e-mail: klaus@ufl.edu
J. Heat Transfer. Nov 2005, 127(11): 1189-1196 (8 pages)
Published Online: May 27, 2005
Article history
Received:
January 6, 2005
Revised:
May 27, 2005
Citation
Qi, Y., and Klausner, J. F. (May 27, 2005). "Heterogeneous Nucleation With Artificial Cavities." ASME. J. Heat Transfer. November 2005; 127(11): 1189–1196. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.2039111
Download citation file:
Get Email Alerts
Cited By
Annulus-side flow boiling and visualization of a three-dimensionally enhanced tube
J. Heat Mass Transfer
Study on the Influence of Different Momentum Ratios on Cold and Hot Fluid Mixing and Thermal Stress in T-Tube
J. Heat Mass Transfer (July 2025)
Related Articles
Microscale bubble nucleation from an artificial cavity in single microchannel
J. Heat Transfer (August,2003)
Nucleate Pool Boiling From Coated and Spirally Wrapped Tubes in Saturated R-134a and R-600a at Low and Moderate Heat Flux
J. Heat Transfer (April,2001)
A Statistical Model of Bubble Coalescence and Its Application to Boiling Heat Flux Prediction—Part II: Experimental Validation
J. Heat Transfer (December,2009)
Onset of Nucleate Boiling and Active Nucleation Site Density During Subcooled Flow Boiling
J. Heat Transfer (August,2002)
Related Proceedings Papers
Related Chapters
Phase Field/Fluctuating Hydrodynamics Approach for Bubble Nucleation
Proceedings of the 10th International Symposium on Cavitation (CAV2018)
Nucleation of Bubbles in Perfluoropentane Droplets Under Ultrasonic Excitation
Proceedings of the 10th International Symposium on Cavitation (CAV2018)
Experimental Investigation of Ventilated Supercavitation Under Unsteady Conditions
Proceedings of the 10th International Symposium on Cavitation (CAV2018)