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Testing of a Loop Heat Pipe with Two Evaporators and Two Condensers
Author(s) -
Jentung Ku,
Gajanana Birur
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
sae technical papers on cd-rom/sae technical paper series
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.295
H-Index - 107
eISSN - 1083-4958
pISSN - 0148-7191
DOI - 10.4271/2001-01-2190
Subject(s) - loop heat pipe , heat pipe , loop (graph theory) , evaporator , micro loop heat pipe , condenser (optics) , mechanics , materials science , heat transfer , nuclear engineering , mechanical engineering , engineering , heat exchanger , physics , mathematics , optics , light source , combinatorics
Most existing Loop Heat Pipes (LHPs) consist of one single evaporator and one single condenser. LHPs with multiple evaporators will be very desirable for cooling multiple heat sources or a heat source with large thermal footprints. Extending the LHP technology to include multiple evaporators and multiple condensers faces some challenges, including the interaction between individual compensation chambers, operating temperature stability, and adaptability to rapid power and sink temperature transients. This paper describe extensive testing of an LHP with two evaporators and two condensers. Tests performed include start-up, power cycle, sink temperature cycle, reservoir temperature cycle, and capillary limit. Test results showed that the loop could operate successfully under various heat load and sink conditions. The loop operating temperature is a function of the total heat load, the heat load distribution between the two evaporators, and temperatures of the two condenser sinks. Under most conditions, only one reservoir contained two-phase fluid and the other reservoir was completely liquid filled. Moreover, control of the loop operating temperature could shift from one reservoir to the other as the test condition changed.

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