International Journal of Thermal Sciences | 2019
Study of microwave heating of reference liquids in a coaxial waveguide reactor using the experimental, semi-analytical and numerical means
Abstract
Abstract In this work, a new application of coaxial waveguides for microwave heating of individual liquid substances and reaction mixtures is considered. The studied reactor is a small hollow coaxial waveguide in which liquids (methanol or ethanol) are exposed to microwaves generated by a miniature semiconductor source of 2.45-GHz frequency. The temperature of a liquid in the coaxial chamber is measured using an IR temperature sensor, thermocouple and optic fiber probes through non-radiating (in microwave range) openings in the thick copper reactor s wall, with the satisfactory accord between their readings at the medium-level power (10\u202fW). The dynamics of microwave heating is studied using the semi-analytical and numerical simulations, which prove to be in good agreement with the experimental data. Two semi-analytical models of microwave heating in the coaxial waveguide as particular cases of the general electromagnetic-thermal problem are developed. One of them is the lumped system model in which uniformity of the temperature field is assumed. It gives good agreement with the measurements and is physically justified at late heating times. Another one is a simplified non-uniform heating model which is based on consideration of a convective turbulent boundary layer in a short horizontal coaxial waveguide. This model furnishes a quantitative explanation of the measured temperature difference at opposite ends of this waveguide over the entire heating period. The results of this study are interesting for development of miniature reactors for on-demand chemistry and pharmacy.