Skip to main content
Article
Thermal Conductivity Improvement in Carbon Nanoparticle Doped PAO Oil: An Experimental Study
Journal of Applied Physics
  • Shadab Shaikh, University of Dayton
  • Khalid Lafdi, University of Dayton
  • Rengasamy Ponnappan, Air Force Research Laboratory
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2007
Abstract

The present work involves a study on the thermal conductivity of nanoparticle-oil suspensions for three types of nanoparticles, namely, carbon nanotubes(CNTs), exfoliated graphite (EXG), and heat treated nanofibers (HTT) with PAO oil as the base fluid. To accomplish the above task, an experimental analysis is performed using a modern light flash technique (LFA 447) for measuring the thermal conductivity of the three types of nanofluids, for different loading of nanoparticles.

The experimental results show a similar trend as observed in literature for nanofluids with a maximum enhancement of approximately 161% obtained for the CNT-PAO oil suspension. The overall percent enhancements for different volume fractions of the nanoparticles are highest for the CNT-based nanofluid, followed by the EXG and the HTT. The findings from this study for the three different types of carbon nanoparticles can have great potential in the field of thermal management.

Inclusive pages
064302-1 to 064302-7
ISBN/ISSN
0021-8979
Document Version
Published Version
Comments

This article has been archived and made available for download in compliance with publisher policy on self-archiving. Permission documentation is on file.

Publisher
American Institute of Physics
Peer Reviewed
Yes
Citation Information
Shadab Shaikh, Khalid Lafdi and Rengasamy Ponnappan. "Thermal Conductivity Improvement in Carbon Nanoparticle Doped PAO Oil: An Experimental Study" Journal of Applied Physics Vol. 101 (2007)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/khalid_lafdi/16/