Atomistic Insight into the Effects of Depositional Nanoparticle on Nanoscale Liquid Film Evaporation

L Wu and W Shao and Q Cao and Z Cui, LANGMUIR, 37, 5202-5212 (2021).

DOI: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.1c00149

Nanoscale liquid film evaporation plays an essential role in many engineering applications. This study carries out molecular dynamics simulations on the effects of the depositional nanoparticle's wettability and volume in base fluid on the evaporation process to understand how the depositional nanoparticle affects the evaporation heat transfer. Increasing the nanoparticle's wettability can enhance the evaporation heat transfer process, and the enhancement effect of the hydrophobic surface is more remarkable than that of the hydrophilic surface. This because the increasing wettability causes more significant solid-liquid interaction. However, the potential energy of argon atoms at the liquid-vapor interface is almost unaffected by wettability. Moreover, when the depositional nanoparticle locates below the free liquid film, increasing the nanoparticle volume has a better heat transfer performance. As the volume increases, the heat transfer through the nanoparticle becomes more obvious, which effectively enhances the heat transfer at the solid-liquid interface and the liquid-vapor interface. The latent heat of phase change at the liquid-vapor interface is almost unchanged so that the evaporation can be enhanced. This research provides an understanding of the effects of depositional nanoparticles on nanoscale evaporation, which can impact several engineering applications, including devices' cooling and fluid transport.

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