THE INFLUENCE OF CONFINEMENT ON THE HYDRODYNAMIC CHARACTERISTICS OF A CYLINDRICAL PILLAR WITHIN A MICROCHANNEL

01 January 2015

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Microfluidic cooling technologies for future electronic and photonic microsystems require more efficient flow configurations to improve heat transfer without a hydrodynamic penalty. Although conventional microchannel heat sinks are effective at dissipating large heat fluxes, their large pressure drops are a limiting design factor. There is some evidence in the literature that obstacles such as pillars placed in a microchannel can enhance downstream convective heat transfer with some increase in pressure drop. In this paper, measured head-loss coefficients are presented for a set of single microchannels of nominal hydraulic diameter 391µm and length 30mm, each containing a single, centrally-located cylindrical pillar covering a range of confinement ratios, ß = 0.1-0.7, over a Reynolds number range of 40-1900. The increase in head-loss due to the addition of the pillar ranged from 143% to 479%, compared to an open channel. To isolate the influence of the pillar, the head-loss contribution of the open channel was extracted from the data for each pillar configuration. The data was curve-fitted to a decaying power-law relationship. High coefficients of determination were recorded with low root mean squared errors, indicating good fits to the data. The data set was surface-fitted with a power law relationship using the Reynolds number based on the cylinder diameter. This was found to collapse the data well below a Reynolds number of 425 to a accuracy of ±20%. Beyond this Reynolds number an inflection point observed, indicating a change in flow regime similar to that of a cylinder in free flow. This paper gives an insight into the hydrodynamic behavior of a microchannel containing cylindrical pillars in a laminar flow regime, and provides a practical tool for determin- ing the head-loss of a configuration that has been demonstrated to improve downstream heat transfer in microchannels.