Optimization of the TPMS Heat Exchanger Toward Cooling the Heat Sink
2025
Mohamad Ziad Saghir | Mahsa Hajialibabaei | Oraib Al-Ketan
The subject of the current paper is cooling heat sinks using the TPMS structure. An experiment was conducted using water and a mixture of 10% vol. ethylene glycol in water, which was used to cool heat sinks in the presence of the TPMS structure. The gyroid was developed using 3D printing with three different porosities: 0.7, 0.8, and 0.9, respectively. The shell network is a single domain, and fluid is circulated at various flow rates. A comparison with the numerical model, as simulated using COMSOL software (version 6.2), showed good agreement. A uniform temperature distribution is a clear indication of uniform cooling. Then, the TPMS structure is changed from one domain to two unconnected domains, and a different flow rate is applied to each domain entry. This approach is unique in that it investigates the cooling of the heat sink with a two-domain structure, which has not been previously studied. The novelty of this paper lies in utilizing two TPMS structure domains to cool the heat sink. Thus, dual-domain TPMS heat sinks are implemented and optimized with separate inlets. Statistical testing of the model for the Nusselt number and the performance evaluation criterion is performed using Fisher&rsquo:s statistical test to analyze variance (ANOVA). It was found that the cooling heat sink is more accurate with two-domain systems. The average Nusselt number polynomial is found to vary linearly with the two-inlet velocity, the porosity and the fluid Prandtl number. Similar linearity is found for the performance evaluation criterion. The optimum Nusselt number equals 77, the PEC equals 49 for a porosity of 0.85, and the Prandtl number is 36.9.
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