Developments in fluidised-bed technologies
D. Highgate and
S. D. Probert
Applied Energy, 1988, vol. 31, issue 4, 305-310
Abstract:
Conventional mobile-particle beds have been developed in order to store heat (or cold) for satisfying industrial and/or air-conditioning requirements by the use of thermally-active particles in which the principal storage mechanism is latent heat. Also fluidisation has been achieved, both in air and in high vacua, using ultrasonic stimulation. This phenomenon can be applied to the development of a controllable thermal-resistance link, as well as for temperature restraint, e.g. for cooling electronic systems in space environments.
Date: 1988
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