4.8 Article

An Ultrathin Nanoporous Membrane Evaporator

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 17, Issue 10, Pages 6217-6220

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.7b02889

Keywords

Ultrathin; nanoporous; evaporation; high flux; Maxwel-lStefan equation

Funding

  1. Air Force Office of Scientific Research
  2. Office of Naval Research
  3. NanoStructures Laboratory at MIT

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Evaporation is a ubiquitous phenomenon found in nature and widely used in industry. Yet a fundamental understanding of interfacial transport during evaporation remains limited to date owing to the difficulty of characterizing the heat and mass transfer at the interface, especially at high heat fluxes (>100 W/cm(2)). In this work, we elucidated evaporation into an air ambient with an ultrathin (approximate to 200 nm thick) nanoporous (approximate to 300 nm pore diameter) membrane. With our evaporator design, we accurately monitored the temperature of the liquid-vapor interface, reduced the thermal-fluidic transport resistance, and mitigated the clogging risk associated with contamination. At a steady state, we demonstrated heat fluxes of 500 W/cm(2) across the interface over a total, evaporation area of 0.20 mm(2). In the high flux regime, we showed the importance of convective transport caused by evaporation itself and that Fick's first law of diffusion no longer applies. This work improves our fundamental understanding of evaporation and paves the way for high flux phase-change devices.

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