International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, Vol.88, 872-879, 2015
Specific heat of metal oxide nanofluids at high concentrations for heat transfer
In this work isobaric specific heat capacity measurements were performed for five different nanofluid sets designed as dispersions up to 15% mass concentrations of MgO, ZnO and ZrO2 in pure ethylene glycol as well as ZnO and ZrO2 in an ethylene glycol + water mixture at 50:50% in volume. Isobaric specific heat capacities for the three dry metallic oxide nanopowders and the two base fluids were also studied with the aim of contributing to elucidate on the heat capacity behavior of nanofluids for heat transfer applications. Measurements were carried out by using a quasi-isothermal Temperature-Modulated Differential Scanning Calorimetry (TMDSC) method in the temperature range from 243.15 to 473.15 K. Base fluid results were compared with literature data to validate the measurement procedure. The specific heats for nano-sized materials here presented were also compared with literature data for bulk-sized of the same metallic oxides. In addition, the experimental values were used to evaluate the goodness of different models existing in literature to predict or correlate the specific heat capacities. A new fitting equation was also proposed to correlate specific heats of nanofluids as a function of the base fluid, nanoparticles as well as nanoparticle concentration. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.