Thermal and electrical conductivities of water-based nanofluids prepared with long multiwalled carbon nanotubes
2008; American Institute of Physics; Volume: 103; Issue: 9 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1063/1.2908229
ISSN1520-8850
AutoresJ. Glory, M. Bonetti, M. Helezen, Martine Mayne-LʼHermite, C. Reynaud,
Tópico(s)Nanopore and Nanochannel Transport Studies
ResumoThermal and electrical conductivities of suspensions of multiwalled carbon nanotubes (MWCNT) in water were measured as a function of temperature, nanotube weight content, and nanotube length. Nanotubes were dispersed in water by using gum Arabic as surfactant. The thermal conductivity was measured by the steady-state method by using a coaxial-cylinder cell that allows the sample temperature to be varied from 15to75°C. Our measurements show that the thermal conductivity enhancement as compared to water linearly increases when the MWCNT weight content increases from 0.01to3wt%, reaching 64% for the MWCNT weight content of 3wt%. The thermal conductivity enhancement is found to be temperature independent up to MWCNT weight content of 2wt%. The average length of the nanotubes appears to be a very sensitive parameter. The thermal conductivity enhancement as compared to water increases by a factor of 3 when the nanotube average length increases in the 0.5–5μm range. Electrical conductivity measurements show that the electrical properties do not follow the same trend as a function of MWCNT weight content, as compared to thermal properties. The electrical conductivity is mainly constant in the studied range, but undergoes a drop when the weight content decreases to about 0.1wt%, which suggests that the MWCNT network in the base fluid might be percolating at this very low value. By comparison, the thermal conductivity does not show any percolation threshold.
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