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NEW EDUCATIONAL LAB: MEASUREMENT AND UNCERTAINTY EVALUATION OF NANOFLUID PARTICLE CONCENTRATION USING VOLUMETRIC FLASK M

NEW EDUCATIONAL LAB: MEASUREMENT AND UNCERTAINTY EVALUATION OF NANOFLUID PARTICLE CONCENTRATION USING VOLUMETRIC FLASK METHOD M. Kostic, Vijay Kumar Sankaramadhi, and Kalyan Chaitanya Simham Department of Mechanical Engineering NORTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY. Nanofluid Particle Concentration.

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NEW EDUCATIONAL LAB: MEASUREMENT AND UNCERTAINTY EVALUATION OF NANOFLUID PARTICLE CONCENTRATION USING VOLUMETRIC FLASK M

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  1. NEW EDUCATIONAL LAB: MEASUREMENT AND UNCERTAINTY EVALUATION OF NANOFLUID PARTICLE CONCENTRATION USING VOLUMETRIC FLASK METHOD M. Kostic, Vijay Kumar Sankaramadhi, and Kalyan Chaitanya Simham Department of Mechanical Engineering NORTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY www.kostic.niu.edu

  2. Nanofluid Particle Concentration • A new, simple educational lab with a contemporary theme,with related error uncertainty analysis • Developed and tested using a volumetric flask and analytic balance method • Based on measured or known density of nanoparticles (i.e. if their composition is known) and measurement of densities of base fluid and nanofluid using precise analytic balance and volumetric flask with specified volume and its accuracy www.kostic.niu.edu

  3. Nanofluid Particle Concentration (2) • Based on the conservation of mass and assumed conservation of volume of the colloidal mixture components, the equations for mass- and volume-concentration of nanoparticles in nanofluid are developed as well as for the related measurement results uncertainties www.kostic.niu.edu

  4. Nanofluid Particle Concentration (3) • The instrumentation and method is first calibrated by measuring known density of distilled water and known nanofluid concentrations, the latter made by direct mixing of predetermined quantities of CuO or Al203 nanoparticles in distilled water up to 25% mass concentration www.kostic.niu.edu

  5. Fluid Density Measurement: www.kostic.niu.edu

  6. Conservation of mass and volume www.kostic.niu.edu

  7. Mass- and Volume-Particle Concentrations www.kostic.niu.edu

  8. Concentration Uncertainty www.kostic.niu.edu

  9. Volumetric Flask & Method Calibration www.kostic.niu.edu

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  12. Nanofluid Particle Concentration and Uncertainty Data www.kostic.niu.edu

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  17. Results • Deviations of measured from known values were within determined uncertainties, i.e.: • less than 0.6% for density and about 1% for particle concentration in nanofluids with 50 mL volumetric flask (note that 1% is 25% relative to the 4% measured concentration, for example) www.kostic.niu.edu

  18. Conclusion (1) • It has been observed by the measurements, see Table 1 & 2, that the 50 mL volumetric flask is more accurate than the 25 mL volumetric flask for measuring the density and mass concentration of nanoparticles in all tested nanofluids • With the same flask, the uncertainty in measured mass concentration is higher for nanofluids with lower nanoparticle concentrations (i.e. 1 % by weight than for 4 and 25 % by weight) www.kostic.niu.edu

  19. Conclusion (2) • For higher concentrations (4 % and 25 % by weight), the uncertainties are within acceptable range, i.e. about 0.6 % for density (Table 1) and about 1% for nanoparticle mass concentration in nanofluids with 50 mL volumetric flask (1% is still high, i.e. it is 25 % relative to the 4% measured concentration, for example, see Table 2). • Most of the uncertainty comes from the uncertainty in volume of the volumetric flask (compare values in the tree columns before the last two columns in Table 2) • Furthermore, the relative concentration uncertainty is inversely decreasing with the concentration increase www.kostic.niu.edu

  20. Conclusion (3) • For small concentrations (several percents) the measurement uncertainty is relatively large and unacceptable, however, for higher concentrations (above 10 %) it is acceptable • Therefore, for lower concentrations, larger volumetric flasks are recommended www.kostic.niu.edu

  21. Conclusion (4) • This method is being further improved and may be used if nanofluids are concentrated by evaporation of the base fluid or other means, or for comparative measurements where absolute accuracy is less important www.kostic.niu.edu

  22. Conclusion (5) • Because of its simplicity, this experimental method can be easily adapted in any related course with laboratory component • The educational values are enhanced by detailed error uncertainty analysis • It demonstrates shortcomings of the method for certain values of the measured quantities and importance of full understanding of physical concept, instrumentations and measurement methods. www.kostic.niu.edu

  23. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT • Dr. John Hull, ANL, who gave idea • Dr. Steven Choi, ANL, for nanofluids research • InSET: Institute for NanoScience, Engineering & Technology • College of Engineering and Engineering Technology at Northern Illinois University. www.kostic.niu.edu

  24. Thank you www.kostic.niu.edu/nanofluids www.kostic.niu.edu

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