info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Experimental Determination of Surface Heat Transfer Coefficient in a Dry Ice-ethanol Cooling Bath Using a Numerical Approach
Fecha
2017-03Registro en:
Santos, Maria Victoria; Sansinena, Marina Julia; Zaritzky, Noemi Elisabet; Chirife, Jorge; Experimental Determination of Surface Heat Transfer Coefficient in a Dry Ice-ethanol Cooling Bath Using a Numerical Approach; Cryo Letters; Cryo-letters; 38; 2; 3-2017; 119-124
0143-2044
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Santos, Maria Victoria
Sansinena, Marina Julia
Zaritzky, Noemi Elisabet
Chirife, Jorge
Resumen
Dry ice-ethanol bath (-78ºC) have been widely used in low temperature biological research to attain rapid cooling of samples below freezing temperature. The prediction of cooling rates of biological samples immersed in dry ice-ethanol bath is of practical interest in cryopreservation. The cooling rate can be obtained using mathematical models representing the heat conduction equation in transient state. Additionally, at the solid cryogenic-fluid interface, the knowledge of the surface heat transfer coefficient (h) is necessary for the convective boundary condition in order to correctly establish the mathematical problem. OBJECTIVE: The study was to apply numerical modeling to obtain the surface heat transfer coefficient of a dry ice-ethanol bath. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A numerical finite element solution of heat conduction equation was used to obtain surface heat transfer coefficients from measured temperatures at the center of polytetrafluoroethylene and polymethylmetacrylate cylinders immersed in a dry ice-ethanol cooling bath. The numerical model considered the temperature dependence of thermophysical properties of plastic materials used. RESULTS: A negative linear relationship is observed between cylinder diameter and heat transfer coefficient in the liquid bath, the calculated h values were 308, 135 and 62.5 W/(m2K) for PMMA 1.3, PTFE 2.59 and 3.14 cm in diameter, respectively. CONCLUSION: The calculated heat transfer coefficients were consistent among several replicates; h in dry ice-ethanol showed an inverse relationship with cylinder diameter.