Ultrasonically Regenerable Nano-Phase Change Emulsions with Low Supercooling and High Shear Stability

Abstract

Nano-phase change emulsions (NPCEs) are attractive thermal fluids for applications such as cold-chain logistics, vaccine storage, and low-temperature energy systems operating in the 0–20 ℃ range. However, their deployment is hindered by significant supercooling and poor stability under shear. Here, we report a formulation strategy combining surfactant and nucleating agent optimization to prepare NPCEs with suppressed supercooling (<0.5 ℃) and high dispersion stability. The NPCEs maintain structural integrity after 24 h of continuous shear at 5 ℃, with droplet size variation within 20 nm. Rheological and microscopic analyses elucidate the interfacial disruption mechanism under low-temperature shear, and a nucleating agent selection principle is established based on molecular conformation and crystallization compatibility. To address performance degradation, we develop a high-energy ultrasonic on-line regeneration method that rapidly restores thermal functionality without system downtime. The NPCEs achieve >99.5% latent heat recovery and maintain stable performance over 60 days of thermal and mechanical cycling. This work demonstrates a regenerable NPCE system featuring ultra-low supercooling and long-term operational stability. The findings offer a practical pathway for scalable deployment of advanced thermal fluids in energy-efficient industrial applications.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
17 Jun 2025
Accepted
25 Jul 2025
First published
28 Jul 2025
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Ind. Chem. Mater., 2025, Accepted Manuscript

Ultrasonically Regenerable Nano-Phase Change Emulsions with Low Supercooling and High Shear Stability

Y. Guo, J. Feng, Z. Xia, Z. Ling, X. Fang and Z. Zhang, Ind. Chem. Mater., 2025, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D5IM00104H

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