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September 7, 2001: The next time you're watching a pot of water boil, perhaps for coffee or a cup of soup, pause for a moment and consider: what would this look like in space? Would the turbulent bubbles rise or fall? And how big would they be? Would the liquid stay in the pan at all? Until a few years ago, nobody knew. Indeed, physicists have trouble understanding the complex behavior of boiling fluids here on Earth. Perhaps boiling in space would prove even more baffling.... It's an important question because boiling happens not only in coffee pots, but also in power plants and spacecraft cooling systems. Engineers need to know how boiling works. ![]() Above: Without buoyancy or convection, boiling fluids behave quite differently in space. Click on the image for a low-resolution QuickTime movie (400 kB) comparing boiling in space and on Earth. Also available in high resolution (4.3 MB). Image courtesy NASA Glenn Research Center . In the early 1990's a team of scientists and engineers from the University of Michigan and NASA decided to find out. Using a freon coolant as their liquid, they conducted a series of boiling experiments on the space shuttle during 5 missions between 1992 to 1996. And indeed, they found some intriguing differences between what happens to boiling fluids on Earth and what happens to them in orbit. For example, a liquid boiling in weightlessness produces -- not thousands of effervescing bubbles -- but one giant undulating bubble that swallows up smaller ones!
"Think of it: no one had really seen boiling in space before these experiments -- in the whole world, ever!" says Dr. Francis Chiaramonte, who was the NASA Project Scientist for the Pool Boiling Experiment. Already, he says, the series of experiments has come to be regarded as "classic" by today's researchers. Despite its entertainment value, this research is much more than a simple curiosity. Learning how liquids boil in space will lead to more efficient cooling systems for spacecraft, such as the ammonia-based system on the International Space Station. Knowledge of boiling in space might also be used someday to design power plants for space stations that use sunlight to boil a liquid to create vapor, which would then turn a turbine to produce electricity. The research could also have applications here on Earth. The weightless environment gives scientists a new "window" into the phenomenon of boiling. Scientists can use this perspective to improve their understanding of the fundamentals of boiling, which might be used to improve the design of terrestrial power plants.
"The phenomenon of boiling is so complex that most of
our understanding is empirical, rather than based on the solutions
to fundamental equations," Chiaramonte says. When a pool of liquid is heated on Earth, gravity causes hotter
regions in the liquid to rise, and cooler, more dense parts to
sink -- a process called "convection." This motion
spreads the heat around inside the liquid. Once it begins to
boil, buoyancy sends bubbles hurling upward, creating a "rolling
boil." Without convection or buoyancy, the process unfolds differently.
Heated fluid doesn't rise, and instead just sits next to the
heater surface and continues to get warmer. Regions of liquid
away from the heater remain relatively cool. Because a smaller
volume of water is being heated, it comes to a boil much more
quickly. As bubbles of vapor form, though, they don't shoot to
the surface -- they coalesce into a giant bubble that wobbles
around within the liquid. "There were many fundamental issues that were still not understood well," says Dr. Herman Merte, the Principal Investigator for the experiments. Merte, who some see as a kind of "founding father" of microgravity pool boiling research, devised the experiments featured in the video tape. Merte and other scientists had performed earlier research on weightless boiling using "drop towers," which could simulate zero-G for a few seconds by simply dropping samples inside a tall tower. These early experiments provided some guidance for designing the shuttle-based experiment, but these brief glimpses don't really compare to the minutes-long observation provided by the shuttle.
Below: One way to simulate the weightlessness of space is to simply let an experiment freefall inside a "drop tower," such as this one at NASA's Glenn Research Center in Cleveland, Ohio. Other methods for simulating weightlessness include flying parabolic arcs in aircraft -- such as NASA's KC-135 "vomit comet" used to train astronauts -- and using sounding rockets. Image courtesy NASA Glenn Research Center.
Today's researchers continue to expand on the foundation of knowledge laid by these experiments. With a better understanding of the physics of boiling fluids, engineers will be able to design improved cooling and power systems to serve people in the future -- both in space and here on Earth. Note: To request a copy of the 67-minute video containing footage from the experiments, please contact the NASA Glenn Research Center at +1-216-433-6159 and specify tape number 396. |
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Credits & Contacts Author: Patrick L. Barry Responsible NASA official: John M. Horack |
Production Editor: Dr.
Tony Phillips Curator: Bryan Walls Media Relations: Steve Roy |
| The Science and Technology Directorate at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center sponsors the Science@NASA web sites. The mission of Science@NASA is to help the public understand how excitingNASA research is and to help NASA scientists fulfill their outreach responsibilities. | |
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Pool Boiling Experiment homepage -- information about the experiments featured in this article Pool Boiling Curve in Microgravity -- technical information about the experiments from Merte's University of Michigan website. Space Research -- more information from NASA's Office of Physical and Biological Research. Pool Boiling Experiment -- more information about boiling on Earth and in space from Microgravity News Microgravity Resources for Teachers -- from NASA Spacelink Microgravity Fluid Physics Program -- at NASA's Glenn Research Center Staying Cool on the ISS -- Science@NASA article: In a strange new world where hot air doesn't rise and heat doesn't conduct, the International Space Station's thermal control systems maintain a delicate balance between the deep-freeze of space and the Sun's blazing heat. |
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