Abstract Nanofluids are engineered colloidal suspensions of solid nanoparticles in aqueous and non-aqueous base fluids with enhanced thermo-physical characteristics compared to conventional heat transfer fluids (HTFs). In this study, we… Click to show full abstract
Abstract Nanofluids are engineered colloidal suspensions of solid nanoparticles in aqueous and non-aqueous base fluids with enhanced thermo-physical characteristics compared to conventional heat transfer fluids (HTFs). In this study, we report on the fabrication of copper nanoparticles-ethylene glycol (CuNPs-EG) nanofluid by using a simple one-step pulsed Nd:YAG laser ablation method to ablate the surface of a pure copper target in EG base fluid under ambient conditions. Structural and morphological analysis confirmed the fabrication of pure spherical shaped CuNPs with average diameter of ~7 nm. Thermal conductivity (k) investigations of CuNPs-EG nanofluid were conducted by using a computational approach where Equilibrium Molecular Dynamics (EMD) simulations integrated with Green-Kubo (EMD-GK) method was used. The obtained EMD-GK results for k were confirmed experimentally through a guarded hot-plate technique within the temperature ranges of 298–318 K. Interestingly, a relative enhancement (η) in the percentage of thermal conductivity of CuNPs-EG nanofluids obtained after an ablation time ta = 5 mins was 15% at 318 K, while sample obtained after ta = 30 mins showed an enhancement of ~24% in thermal conductivity. These obtained results confirmed the suitability of using a laser based ablation method to fabricate highly efficient nanofluids which could be used as alternatives for conventional HTFs in various heat transfer applications.
               
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