Measures of Thermal Transpiration Flow
ORAL
Abstract
Thermal transpiration is the macroscopic movement of gas-particles induced by a temperature gradient. The gas-particles move from the lower to the higher temperature zone. The main aim of the present work is to measure experimentally the flow created by thermal transpiration in a tube heated at its outlet. The experimental system is composed by a circular cross section micro-tube and two reservoirs settled respectively at the inlet and outlet of the capillary. The reservoirs are coupled to two high-speed response time capacitance diaphragm gauges which monitor the pressure variation in time. By monitoring the pressure variation in time is possible to measure the macroscopic movement of gas-particles along the tube: by thermal transpiration gas-particles move from the cold to the hot region of the tube increasing the hot-side reservoir absolute pressure; while a drop of pressure is registered in the cold-side reservoir. The experiments are conducted for three different gases, Argon, Helium and Nitrogen, in a pressure range from $0.1$ to $10$ \textit{torr} and for three different temperature differences: $\Delta T=30,\,40,\,50$ degrees. The gas rarefaction conditions go from transitional to slip regime.
*This research is funded by the [European Community's] Seventh Framework Programme ([FP7/2007-2013] under grant agreement n-215504
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