
In work reported in the journal Small, the researchers show that wires and fabrics made from carbon nanotube fibers, or CNTFs, can provide substantially more heating power per unit mass than conventional metal-alloy heaters when placed directly in gas streams, pointing to a new pathway for electrifying industrial heat.
Industrial plants routinely heat gases for chemical production, drying, thermal treatment and manufacturing, and this heat is usually supplied by burning fuels, creating a major source of carbon emissions.
Switching to electric heating may appear straightforward, since it relies on Joule heating in resistive elements, but heating moving gases imposes stringent constraints: devices must transfer heat quickly and uniformly into the gas while avoiding hot spots, deformation and failure under extreme temperatures.
Immersion heaters placed directly in the gas flow can boost efficiency but also expose the heating element to a much harsher environment, coupling geometry, mechanical stability and thermal performance.
"One of the most stubborn constraints is size," said Daniel J. Preston, assistant professor of mechanical engineering at Rice, whose lab studies high-performance thermal management systems.
Thinner elements exchange heat with gases more effectively, yet conventional metal alloys are hard to fabricate, handle and operate reliably at very small diameters, limiting design options for gas heaters.
CNTFs offer an alternative because they combine suitable electrical resistivity for Joule heating with exceptional strength-to-weight ratios and unusually high thermal conductivity compared with standard heater materials.
"Carbon nanotube fibers behave very differently from metal wires," said Matteo Pasquali, the A.J. Hartsook Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering and director of the Carbon Hub at Rice University.
"They are lightweight, flexible and remarkably strong, which allows us to consider heater geometries and fabrication techniques that would be impractical with conventional materials," Pasquali said.
Instead of adapting CNTFs to existing coil-like designs, the team built heaters made entirely from the fibers in configurations that included single filaments, parallel arrays and textile-style fabrics.
The researchers focused on specific power loading, defined as the maximum heating power per unit mass that a device can sustain before it fails, as a key performance metric for comparing materials and designs.
Across multiple geometries and operating conditions, CNTF heaters consistently achieved higher specific power loadings than comparable metal-alloy elements, especially in nonoxidizing environments where carbon-based materials tolerate much higher temperatures without degrading.
From a heat-transfer perspective, the high thermal conductivity of CNTFs played an important role in performance.
"Their high thermal conductivity helps distribute heat and suppress localized hot spots, which are a common cause of heater failure," said Geoff Wehmeyer, assistant professor of mechanical engineering and an expert in nanoscale heat transport.
"That heat spreading fundamentally changes how these devices behave under extreme conditions," Wehmeyer added.
The study emphasizes that performance gains stem not only from the intrinsic properties of CNTFs but also from the new device architectures those properties enable.
Because CNTFs can be produced at extremely small diameters while retaining mechanical robustness, they open heater design possibilities that are difficult or impossible to achieve with traditional metal wires.
"Materials only become impactful when you can reliably build with them," Pasquali said.
"CNTFs provide unusual flexibility: For example, you can tie a knot in them and they don't break; this expands the available design space," he said.
A distinctive aspect of the project is its use of textile-inspired manufacturing, where CNTF yarns are woven, knitted and assembled into lightweight, high-surface-area structures well suited to immersion heating.
Vanessa Sanchez, assistant professor of mechanical engineering at Rice, contributed expertise in advanced manufacturing and textile technologies to help translate nanoscale fibers into practical device-scale systems.
"Textile techniques give us extraordinary freedom in creating three-dimensional architectures," Sanchez said. "We can design heaters that are lightweight, porous and mechanically compliant while remaining electrically functional," she said.
Compared with rigid metal meshes, CNTF fabrics exhibited more uniform heating and fewer hot spots, again reflecting the ability of the fibers to spread heat and maintain stable temperatures across complex geometries.
The project brought together specialists in materials synthesis, nanoscale heat transfer, device engineering and manufacturing, as well as industrial partners.
The research team collaborated closely with industrial researchers Robert Headrick and Dhruv Arora at Shell, along with engineers at DexMat, a company that has scaled up CNTF production and commercialization.
"This work required multiple layers of expertise," Wehmeyer said.
"Producing high-quality CNTFs is only the starting point. Understanding how they perform thermally and integrating them into functional devices is equally important," he said.
Research Report:High Specific Power Loading of Carbon Nanotube Fiber Devices for Gas Heating
Related Links
Rice University
Powering The World in the 21st Century at Energy-Daily.com
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