Abstract
The performance of water as a heat transfer medium in numerous applications is limited by
its effective thermal conductivity. In order to improve the thermal conductivity of water, herein we
report the development and thermophysical characterization of a novel metal-metaloxide-carbon
based ternary hybrid nanoparticles (THNp), GO-TiO2-Ag and the rGO-TiO2-Ag. The results indicate
that the graphene oxide and reduced graphene oxide based ternary hybrid nanoparticles dispersed in
water enhance its thermal conductivity by 66% and 83%, respectively, even at very low
concentrations. Mechanisms contributing to this significant enhancement are discussed. The
experimental thermal conductivity is plotted against the existing empirical hybrid thermal
conductivity correlations. We found that those correlations are not suitable for the
metal-metaloxide-carbon combinations, calling for the developing a new thermal conductivity
models. The rheological measurements of the nanofluids display non-Newtonian behavior, and the
viscosity reduces with the increase in temperature. Such behavior is possibly due to the non-uniform
shapes of the ternary hybrid nanoparticles.