Local Heat Transfer Control Using Liquid Dielectrophoresis at Graphene/Water Interfaces
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Authors
Barışık, Murat
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Green Open Access
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No
Abstract
Graphene-based materials are considered for the solution of the thermal management problem of current and next generation micro/nano-electronics with high heat generation densities. However, the hydrophobic nature of few-layer graphene makes passing heat to a fluid very challenging. We introduced an active and local manipulation of heat transfer between graphene and water using an applied, non-uniform electric field. When water undergoes electric field induced orientation polarization and liquid dielectrophoresis, a substantial increase in heat transfer develops due to a decrease in interfacial thermal resistance and increase in thermal conductivity. By using two locally embedded pin and plate electrodes of different sizes, we demonstrated a two-dimensional heat transfer control between two parallel few-layer graphene slabs. We obtained local heat transfer increase up to nine times at pin electrode region with an ultra-low Kapitza resistance through the studied non-uniform electric field strength range creating highly-ordered compressed water in the experimentally measured density limits. With this technique, heat can be (i) distributed from a smaller location to a larger section and/or (ii) collected to a smaller section from a larger region. Current results are important for hot spot cooling and/or heat focusing applications. © 2020
Description
Keywords
Electro-freezing, Electro-wetting, Kapitza resistance, Nanoscale heat transfer, Phonon transport
Fields of Science
0103 physical sciences, 02 engineering and technology, 0210 nano-technology, 01 natural sciences
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OpenCitations Citation Count
5
Volume
166
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CrossRef : 7
Scopus : 13
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