2008 Annual Meeting
(519g) Thermal Conductivity of Nanofluids of Aqueous Dispersions of Nanoclay and Surfactant Micelles
Authors
In this work, thermal conductivities of nanofluids were measured using the transient hot-wire method in order to study the effect of parameters such as constituent thermal conductivities, particle size and dispersion state. Measurements tended to drift with time, and a modified procedure is described for minimizing measurement errors. Thermal conductivities of aqueous nanofluids of synthetic nanoclay (Laponite RD®) and micellar solutions of anionic and nonionic surfactants were measured. It was found that whereas for Laponite nanofluids thermal conductivity increases with concentration, for surfactants it decreases. These results are also compared and contrasted with those on metal-based nanofluids and with predictions of theoretical models such as the effective medium theory, the model of Hamilton and Crosser and microconvection models.