Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / Scopus Indexed Publications Collection

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/7148

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  • Article
    Experimental Assessment of Alternating Magnetic Fields for Subcooled Flow Boiling Enhancement in an Annulus
    (Pergamon-Elsevier Science Ltd, 2026) Youzbashi-Zade, Saeed; Zonouzi, Sajjad Ahangar; Aminfar, Habib; Mohammadpourfard, Mousa
    The application of magnetic fields to enhance boiling heat transfer in magnetic nanofluids has emerged as a promising strategy for advanced thermal management, yet the influence of alternating magnetic fields remains largely unexplored compared to their constant counterparts. The effects of alternating and constant (steady) magnetic fields on the subcooled flow boiling of a ferrofluid in a vertically oriented annulus are thoroughly investigated experimentally in this work. The magnetic field generated by face-to-face electromagnets was systematically varied in strength (up to 0.3 T), frequency, and waveform (square, triangular, sinusoidal). The results demonstrate that magnetic fields under constant and alternating conditions substantially enhance local and average convective heat transfer coefficients and critical heat flux compared to the no-field baseline. Due to its ability to effectively disrupt the thermal boundary layer and improve bubble dynamics, the alternating square-wave magnetic field (0.3 T, 2 Hz) notably produces the greatest enhancement. Under this condition, the convective heat transfer coefficient increased by up to 21 %, and the critical heat flux improved by approximately 24 % compared to the no-field baseline. The enhancement strongly depends on mass flux and field frequency, with optimal frequencies shifting higher at increased flow rates due to shortened nanoparticle residence time in the magnetic region. At elevated mass fluxes, the benefit of alternating over constant fields diminishes as inertial effects become dominant.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 2
    Citation - Scopus: 2
    Experimental Optimization of Alternating Magnetic Field Parameters for Convective Heat Transfer Enhancement of Ferrofluid in a Vertical Annulus
    (Pergamon-Elsevier Science Ltd, 2025) Youzbashi-Zade, Saeed; Aminfar, Habib; Mohammadpourfard, Mousa
    This study presents a detailed experimental investigation of how applying constant and alternating magnetic fields enhances the convective heat transfer of Fe3O4/water ferrofluid flowing through a vertical annulus. The setup was exposed to both constant (steady) and alternating magnetic fields with different waveforms (square, triangular, and sinusoidal), frequencies, intensities, and axial positions. Results showed that both steady and alternating fields substantially increased heat transfer within the active region, with the alternating field providing the highest enhancement. This improvement comes from stronger fluid movement under the oscillating field, which disrupts the thermal boundary layer more efficiently than the steady field. The maximum local heat transfer enhancement decreased from 54.98 % at Re = 200 to 29.43 % at Re = 1000, highlighting the reduced influence of magnetic forces at higher flow rates. The study also explored the influence of magnetic field initiation location, revealing that downstream activation yields higher peak local enhancement, while earlier activation ensures more uniform improvement along the annulus. Among the tested waveforms, the square wave resulted in the greatest convective enhancement, followed by triangular and sinusoidal forms. Results also revealed that, regardless of waveform, increasing frequency initially enhances the heat transfer coefficient, reaching an optimal value typically at 2-5 Hz depending on Reynolds number and waveform.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 19
    Citation - Scopus: 20
    Multi-Objective Optimization of a Novel Supercritical Co2 Cycle-Based Combined Cycle for Solar Power Tower Plants Integrated With Sofc and Lng Cold Energy and Regasification
    (Wiley, 2022) Taheri, Muhammad Hadi; Khani, Leyla; Mohammadpourfard, Mousa; Aminfar, Habib; Gökçen Akkurt, Gülden
    This study presents a new system for solar power, which is generated through a solar power tower with a molten salt cycle. To increase the consumption of energy losses, besides the closed supercritical carbon dioxide (sCO2) Brayton cycle, a liquid natural gas (LNG) open-cycle was used as a heat sink alongside a cascade organic Rankine cycle with the capability of working at low temperatures. LNG is implemented for a solid oxide fuel cell input, after cooling down the power generation systems and power generation. Besides the economic and thermodynamic analysis, destruction of exergy has been controlled and parametric studies are performed to investigate the influence of relative factors on the performance of the system. To optimize the system, a genetics algorithm has been employed by considering two reciprocal objective functions of the total cost rate and the exergy efficiency. The results of multi-objective optimization show that the optimized point has a total product cost rate of $115.3/h and an exergy efficiency of 71%. Furthermore, exergy analysis shows that the molten salt heat exchangers and the LNG heat exchangers have the maximum rates of irreversibility and must be taken into consideration as a major priority for optimization.