Interfacial cooling and heating, temperature discontinuity and inversion in evaporation and condensation
Gang Chen

TL;DR
This paper develops a kinetic-theory based model to analyze interfacial temperature jumps during evaporation and condensation, revealing intrinsic temperature differences and explaining experimental discrepancies.
Contribution
It introduces a new model that captures the temperature discontinuities and inversion phenomena at the interface, improving understanding of phase change processes.
Findings
Vapor temperature near the interface cools below saturation during evaporation.
Vapor heats above saturation during condensation.
Thin liquid layers lead to saturation of evaporation and condensation rates.
Abstract
Although ubiquitous in nature and industrial processes, transport processes at the interface during evaporation and condensation are still poorly understood. Experiments have shown temperature discontinuities at the interface during evaporation and condensation but the experimentally reported interface temperature jump varies by two orders of magnitude. Even the direction of such temperature jump is still being debated. Using kinetic-theory based expressions for the interfacial mass flux and heat flux, we solve coupled problem between the liquid and the vapor phase during evaporation and condensation. Our model shows that when evaporation or condensation happens, an intrinsic temperature difference develops across the interface, due to the mismatch of the enthalpy carried by vapor at the interface and the bulk region. The vapor temperature near the interface cools below the saturation…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHeat Transfer and Boiling Studies · Fluid Dynamics and Thin Films · nanoparticles nucleation surface interactions
