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Thermal conductivity of nanoparticle suspensions

by: S. A. Putnam, D. G. Cahill, P. V. Braun, Z. Ge, R. G. Shimmin
J Appl Phys, Vol. 99, No. 8. (2006), doi:10.1063/1.2189933  Key: citeulike:1813678

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Abstract

We describe an optical beam deflection technique for measurements of the thermal diffusivity of fluid mixtures and suspensions of nanoparticles with a precision of better than 1%. Our approach is tested using the thermal conductivity of ethanol-water mixtures; in nearly pure ethanol, the increase in thermal conductivity with water concentration is a factor of 2 larger than predicted by effective medium theory. Solutions of C60 - C70 fullerenes in toluene and suspensions of alkanethiolate-protected Au nanoparticles were measured to maximum volume fractions of 0.6% and 0.35 vol %, respectively. We do not observe anomalous enhancements of the thermal conductivity that have been reported in previous studies of nanofluids; the largest increase in thermal conductivity we have observed is 1.3%±0.8% for 4 nm diam Au particles suspended in ethanol. © 2006 American Institute of Physics. Art. No.: 084308


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