As one of the most promising working substances for space nuclear power sources, research on the heat transfer characteristics of helium–xenon gas mixtures has become the key issue in focus. In this paper, through an extensive literature research, the current research results are classified and organized. The results show that there are semi-empirical formulas for physical property parameters with high prediction accuracy, and there are also Nusselt correlations with small errors. However, both lack the support of experimental data. There is no systematic research on enhanced heat transfer technologies, and the conclusions of the existing studies are not significant, so they can only make limited reference contributions to the future study of enhanced heat transfer technologies. More flow and heat transfer experiments on helium–xenon mixtures are urgently needed, through detailed analysis of the heat transfer performance of helium–xenon flow, identifying the key factors affecting the heat transfer thermal resistance, and corresponding heat transfer enhancement measures to form an optimized design method applicable to helium–xenon heat exchangers. In this way, an enhanced heat transfer theory of helium–xenon heat exchangers can be developed.
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