Cold Water Jets on a Hot Si surface
ORAL
Abstract
We are using a femtosecond pump-probe apparatus to study heat transfer when a pulsed jet of liquid water impinges on a hot Pt-coated Si surface (Leidenfrost Effect). The light source in the experiment is a 100 mW Er:fiber laser operating at a wavelength of $\lambda $=1550 nm; the total volume of the pulsed water jet is $\sim $0.9 mm$^{3}$. The temperature change within the Si substrate at a distance of 50 microns from the interface is measured by a novel time-resolved thermometry based on two-photon absorption. We measure the thermal conductance of the water layer within 50 nm of the interface by time-domain thermo-reflectance; changes in the thermal conductance provide a direct measurement of the contact time of the liquid. We convert the integral of the temperature excursion to the energy transferred using a Green's function solution of heat conduction in the Si substrate. Both the energy transferred and contact time show a smooth evolution from high values at 110C to low values at 210C without any clear indication of a Leidenfrost point.
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