Review on aqueous graphene nanoplatelet nanofluids: preparation, Stability, thermophysical properties, and applications in heat exchangers and solar thermal collectors

Nanofluids of graphene nanoplatelets (GNP) have superior thermal performance characteristics and good sta-bility, are relatively affordable, and can easily be prepared by the two-step method. This review performs an in-depth analysis of the preparation, stability, and thermophysical properties of GN...

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Main Authors: Huq, Tahsinul, Ong, Hwai Chyuan, Chew, Bee Teng, Leong, Kin Yuen, Kazi, Salim Newaz
Format: Article
Published: Pergamon-Elsevier Science Ltd 2022
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/42968/
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spelling my.um.eprints.429682023-09-29T02:09:40Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/42968/ Review on aqueous graphene nanoplatelet nanofluids: preparation, Stability, thermophysical properties, and applications in heat exchangers and solar thermal collectors Huq, Tahsinul Ong, Hwai Chyuan Chew, Bee Teng Leong, Kin Yuen Kazi, Salim Newaz TJ Mechanical engineering and machinery Nanofluids of graphene nanoplatelets (GNP) have superior thermal performance characteristics and good sta-bility, are relatively affordable, and can easily be prepared by the two-step method. This review performs an in-depth analysis of the preparation, stability, and thermophysical properties of GNP nanofluids, and their appli-cations in heat exchangers, solar thermal collectors, and heat pipes. This study analyses in detail the performance improvements achieved with pristine, covalent functionalised, and non-covalent functionalised GNP nanofluids compared to water. Covalent functionalisation was found to be superior to non-covalent functionalisation in terms of stability and heat transfer coefficients. Functionalisation by electrophilic addition and free-radical grafting were found to be more environmentally friendly compared to acid treatment. In terms of convective heat transfer coefficient, pristine GNP outperformed functionalised GNP, but both types showed large im-provements compared to water. It was found that stability and heat transfer performance improved as particle size was decreased, while thermal conduction and convection coefficients increased with nanofluid concentra-tion and temperature. Thermal conductivity improvements of over 30% were found for both pristine and covalently functionalised GNP nanofluids at 0.1 wt% concentration. A maximum convection heat transfer co-efficient increase of 200% was achieved using 0.1 wt% pristine GNP nanofluid. By comparison, a maximum improvement of 119% was achieved using covalently functionalised GNP. The convective heat transfer enhancement seemed to increase with decreasing tube diameter. In flat plate solar collector applications, effi-ciency improvements over 20% were obtained for covalently functionalised GNP nanofluids at 0.1 wt%, while an efficiency improvement of over 65% was obtained using pristine GNP in an evacuated tube solar collector. Applications in cooling, heat pipes, and direct absorption solar collectors were also reviewed. From this study, it could be inferred that GNP nanofluids are a viable alternative working fluid. Further research is needed to optimise their performance. Pergamon-Elsevier Science Ltd 2022-06-25 Article PeerReviewed Huq, Tahsinul and Ong, Hwai Chyuan and Chew, Bee Teng and Leong, Kin Yuen and Kazi, Salim Newaz (2022) Review on aqueous graphene nanoplatelet nanofluids: preparation, Stability, thermophysical properties, and applications in heat exchangers and solar thermal collectors. Applied Thermal Engineering, 210. ISSN 1359-4311, DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.applthermaleng.2022.118342 <https://doi.org/10.1016/j.applthermaleng.2022.118342>. 10.1016/j.applthermaleng.2022.118342
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic TJ Mechanical engineering and machinery
spellingShingle TJ Mechanical engineering and machinery
Huq, Tahsinul
Ong, Hwai Chyuan
Chew, Bee Teng
Leong, Kin Yuen
Kazi, Salim Newaz
Review on aqueous graphene nanoplatelet nanofluids: preparation, Stability, thermophysical properties, and applications in heat exchangers and solar thermal collectors
description Nanofluids of graphene nanoplatelets (GNP) have superior thermal performance characteristics and good sta-bility, are relatively affordable, and can easily be prepared by the two-step method. This review performs an in-depth analysis of the preparation, stability, and thermophysical properties of GNP nanofluids, and their appli-cations in heat exchangers, solar thermal collectors, and heat pipes. This study analyses in detail the performance improvements achieved with pristine, covalent functionalised, and non-covalent functionalised GNP nanofluids compared to water. Covalent functionalisation was found to be superior to non-covalent functionalisation in terms of stability and heat transfer coefficients. Functionalisation by electrophilic addition and free-radical grafting were found to be more environmentally friendly compared to acid treatment. In terms of convective heat transfer coefficient, pristine GNP outperformed functionalised GNP, but both types showed large im-provements compared to water. It was found that stability and heat transfer performance improved as particle size was decreased, while thermal conduction and convection coefficients increased with nanofluid concentra-tion and temperature. Thermal conductivity improvements of over 30% were found for both pristine and covalently functionalised GNP nanofluids at 0.1 wt% concentration. A maximum convection heat transfer co-efficient increase of 200% was achieved using 0.1 wt% pristine GNP nanofluid. By comparison, a maximum improvement of 119% was achieved using covalently functionalised GNP. The convective heat transfer enhancement seemed to increase with decreasing tube diameter. In flat plate solar collector applications, effi-ciency improvements over 20% were obtained for covalently functionalised GNP nanofluids at 0.1 wt%, while an efficiency improvement of over 65% was obtained using pristine GNP in an evacuated tube solar collector. Applications in cooling, heat pipes, and direct absorption solar collectors were also reviewed. From this study, it could be inferred that GNP nanofluids are a viable alternative working fluid. Further research is needed to optimise their performance.
format Article
author Huq, Tahsinul
Ong, Hwai Chyuan
Chew, Bee Teng
Leong, Kin Yuen
Kazi, Salim Newaz
author_facet Huq, Tahsinul
Ong, Hwai Chyuan
Chew, Bee Teng
Leong, Kin Yuen
Kazi, Salim Newaz
author_sort Huq, Tahsinul
title Review on aqueous graphene nanoplatelet nanofluids: preparation, Stability, thermophysical properties, and applications in heat exchangers and solar thermal collectors
title_short Review on aqueous graphene nanoplatelet nanofluids: preparation, Stability, thermophysical properties, and applications in heat exchangers and solar thermal collectors
title_full Review on aqueous graphene nanoplatelet nanofluids: preparation, Stability, thermophysical properties, and applications in heat exchangers and solar thermal collectors
title_fullStr Review on aqueous graphene nanoplatelet nanofluids: preparation, Stability, thermophysical properties, and applications in heat exchangers and solar thermal collectors
title_full_unstemmed Review on aqueous graphene nanoplatelet nanofluids: preparation, Stability, thermophysical properties, and applications in heat exchangers and solar thermal collectors
title_sort review on aqueous graphene nanoplatelet nanofluids: preparation, stability, thermophysical properties, and applications in heat exchangers and solar thermal collectors
publisher Pergamon-Elsevier Science Ltd
publishDate 2022
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/42968/
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