It may seem illogical, but boiling is a very efficient way to cool engineering components and systems used in the extreme environments of space.
An experiment to gain a basic understanding of this phenomena launched to the International Space Station on space shuttle Discovery Feb. 24. The Nucleate Pool Boiling Experiment, or NPBX, is one of two experiments in the new Boiling eXperiment Facility, or BXF.
Nucleate boiling is bubble growth from a heated surface and the  subsequent detachment of the bubble to a cooler surrounding liquid.  As a  result, these bubbles can efficiently transfer energy from the boiling  surface into the surrounding fluid. This investigation provides an  understanding of heat transfer and vapor removal processes that happen  during nucleate boiling in microgravity. Researchers will glean  information to better design and operate space systems that use boiling  for efficient heat removal. 
Bubbles in microgravity grow to different sizes than on 
Earth. This  experiment will focus on the dynamics of single and multiple bubbles and  the associated heat transfer.  
NPBX uses a polished aluminum wafer, powered by heaters bonded to its  backside, and five fabricated cavities that can be controlled  individually. The experiment will study single and/or multiple bubbles  generated at these cavities. It will measure the power supplied to each  heater group, and cameras will record the bubble dynamics. Analysis of  the heater power data and recorded images will allow investigators to  determine how bubble dynamics and heat transfer differ in microgravity.  
"With boiling, the size and weight of heat exchange equipment used in  space systems can be significantly reduced," said Vijay Dhir, the  experiment's principal investigator at the University of California, Los  Angeles. "Boiling and multiphase heat transfer is an enabling  technology for space exploration missions including storage and handling  of cryogenic, or extremely low temperature liquids, life support  systems, power generation and thermal management."  
"The cost of transporting equipment to space depends on the size and  weight of the equipment," added David Chao, the project scientist from  NASA's Glenn Research Center in Cleveland. "The knowledge base that will  be developed through the experiment will give us the capability to  achieve cooling of various components and systems used in space in an  efficient manner and could lead to smaller and lighter 
spacecraft."