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Leidenfrost heat engine: Sustained rotation of levitating rotors on turbine-inspired substrates

Prashant Agrawal, Gary G. Wells, Rodrigo Ledesma-Aguilar, Glen McHale, Anthony Buchoux, Adam Stokes and Khellil Sefiane

Applied Energy, 2019, vol. 240, issue C, 399-408

Abstract: The prospect of thermal energy harvesting in extreme environments, such as in space or at microscales, offers unique opportunities and challenges for the development of alternate energy conversion technologies. At microscales mechanical friction presents a challenge in the form of energy losses and wear, while presence of high temperature differences and locally available resources inspire the development of new types of heat engines for space and planetary exploration. Recently, levitation using thin-film boiling, via the Leidenfrost effect, has been explored to convert thermal energy to mechanical motion, establishing the basis for novel reduced-friction heat engines. In the Leidenfrost effect, instantaneous thin-film boiling occurs between a droplet and a heated surface, thereby levitating the droplet on its own vapor. This droplet state provides virtually frictionless motion and self-propulsion, whose direction can be designed into the system by asymmetrically texturing the substrate. However, sustaining such thermal to mechanical energy conversion is challenging because the Leidenfrost transition temperature for water on a smooth metal surface is ∼220 °C and, despite the low thermal conductivity of the vapor layer, the droplet continuously evaporates. Further challenges include effective transfer of thermal energy into rotational, rather than linear motion, and driving solid components and not simply droplets.

Keywords: Leidenfrost; Wettability; Droplet; Heat transfer; Heat engine; Thin-film boiling; Vapor bearing (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2019
References: View references in EconPapers View complete reference list from CitEc
Citations: View citations in EconPapers (3)

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DOI: 10.1016/j.apenergy.2019.02.034

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