Abstract
Heat transfer inside thermally expandable and flexible fluidic thin-film channels is analyzed in this work. Two categories are analyzed: the first category is when the upper plate of the thin film is mobile and flexible, and the second is when the side plates of the thin film are flexible and mobile. The expansion in the thin-film heights (category I) or widths (category II) are linearly related to the local fluid pressure and the local temperature of the heated plate based on the principles of linear elasticity and constant volumetric thermal expansion coefficient. The governing Reynolds, momentum, and energy equations are properly nondimensionalized and solved numerically using an implicit method. The Peclet number, stiffness parameter, thermal expansion parameter, and aspect ratio are found to be the main controlling parameters. It is found that thermally expandable flexible thin films that belong to category I can produce significant increase in cooling as the heating load increases, especially when operated at lower Peclet numbers, whereas the cooling effect for those that belong to category II is almost unaffected by the expansion. This work paves the way to practically utilize thermally expandable flexible thin films, especially in MEMS and electronic cooling applications.