Short-period thermal cyclic test device for large volumes of microencapsulated phase change materials using a Venturi injector

Authors
Kim, SunukShin, Dong HoJung, YoungyunKo, Han SeoShin, Youhwan
Issue Date
2021-11
Publisher
ELSEVIER
Citation
JOURNAL OF ENERGY STORAGE, v.43
Abstract
Microencapsulated phase change material (MPCM), which has a large amount of heat capacity during phase change, has been used as a thermal storage medium as a building composite material. MPCM is broken by heat-induced volume changes, and hence, thermal cyclic tests must be performed to estimate their durability. Existing methods for thermal cyclic testing have limitations such as few samples that can be tested or long duration of test. This paper proposes a thermal cyclic test device with a Venturi injector designed to test a large number of samples rapidly. Results of the detailed tests on the pressure and flow rate change of the Venturi tube and the reliability assessment of the developed equipment are presented. MPCM slurry can be transported with up to 25% mass concentration of MPCM at a flow rate of 5 LPM. At 25wt%, MPCM slurry could change 100% of its phase within a straight line of a heat exchange pipe length of 0.61 m from 28 to 35 degrees C. One thermal cycle for 1 kg of MPCM capsules has a duration of 47 s. Finally, a 5000-thermal cycle test of MPCM was carried out, and it showed that using this equipment caused no broken capsules.
Keywords
CHANGE MATERIAL SLURRY; ENERGY STORAGE; HEAT-TRANSFER; PCM; PERFORMANCE; FLOW; STABILITY; CONCRETE; SYSTEM; MPCM; CHANGE MATERIAL SLURRY; ENERGY STORAGE; HEAT-TRANSFER; PCM; PERFORMANCE; FLOW; STABILITY; CONCRETE; SYSTEM; MPCM; Venturi injector; Short-period; Cyclic test; Breakage rate; Microencapsulated phase change material (MPCM); Slurry
ISSN
2352-152X
URI
https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/116208
DOI
10.1016/j.est.2021.103223
Appears in Collections:
KIST Article > 2021
Files in This Item:
There are no files associated with this item.
Export
RIS (EndNote)
XLS (Excel)
XML

qrcode

Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

BROWSE