科技报告详细信息
Characterizing Microfluidic Operations Underlying an Electrowetting Heat Pipe on the International Space Station
Wikramanayake, Enakshi ; Hale, Renee ; Elam, John ; Shahriari, Arjang ; Bahadur, Vaibhav ; Alvarez-Hernandez, Angel R ; Howard, Nathan
关键词: MICROFLUIDIC DEVICES;    DROPS (LIQUIDS);    SPLITTING;    WETTING;    HEAT PIPES;    CONDUCTIVE HEAT TRANSFER;    THERMAL RESISTANCE;    PARTICLE MOTION;    PRINTED CIRCUITS;    DIELECTRICS;    ELECTRODES;    CONDENSATES;    SEQUENCING;    ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING;    LOW GRAVITY MANUFACTURING;    EVAPORATORS;    INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION;    NASA SPACE PROGRAMS;   
RP-ID  :  IMECE 2018-86223,JSC-E-DAA-TN54995
学科分类:力学,机械学
美国|英语
来源: NASA Technical Reports Server
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【 摘 要 】

Electrowetting heat pipes (EHPs) are a newly conceptualized class of heat pipes, wherein the adiabatic wick section is replaced by electrowetting-based pumping of the condensate (as droplets) to the evaporator. Specific advantages include the ability to transport high heat loads over long distances, low thermal resistance and power consumption, and the absence of moving mechanical parts. In this work, we describe characterization of key microfluidic operations (droplet motion and splitting) underlying the EHP on the International Space Station (ISS). The testing was performed under the Advanced Passive Thermal eXperiment (APTx) project, a project to test a suite of passive thermal control devices funded by the ISS Technology Demonstration Office at NASA JSC (Johnson Space Center). A rapid manufacturing method was used to fabricate the electrowetting device on a printed circuit board. Key device-related considerations were to ensure reliability and package the experimental hardware within a confined space. Onboard the ISS, experiments were conducted to study electrowetting-based droplet motion and droplet splitting, by imaging droplet manipulation operations via pre-programmed electrical actuation sequences. An applied electric field of 36 Volts per micron resulted in droplet speeds approaching 10 millimeters per second. Droplet splitting dynamics were observed and the time required to split droplets was quantified. Droplet motion data was analyzed to estimate the contact line friction coefficient. Overall, this demonstration is the first-ever electrowetting experiment in space. The obtained results are useful for future design of the EHP and other electrowetting-based systems for microgravity applications.

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