So, the thicker the wire, the greater the mass that is heated. This lends itself to more surface area (btw the juice coats the coil, outside too . . see pic). Then its a question of providing sufficient energy to a short enough length of wire to build heat induced resistance rapidly. After that, its a question of supplying sufficient juice to allow for a reaction to endure 10 seconds (lung capacity, mouth draw capacity). After that . . . . its about not spoiling juice (by cooking it) which won't be consumed during the current phase change session. Lastly, heat energy should not be wasted (dissipated) by being transferred to the atomizer, or the wicking medium unduly.
BTW
Here's where I'm not a scientist/theoretician. I'll be crass enough to hop right over to anecdotal experience. After months of seeking the perfect vape (actively, creatively, experimentally), the place where I found this magic mix of factors . . . . . . . is 26g Nichrome @ .5-.7Ω (goes to mass/length/surface area), in a micro coil (conserve heat and exacerbate resistance, increase inductance), with sterile cotton wick (very low heatsink/footprint, holding lots of juice), in the RM2 (ceramic base, air-coolinig fins, squonkable), on the REO (bottom feeder, only cook the juice your phase shifting, leave the rest pure), with a 24 amp discharge battery.
Juice on outside:
26g/25g coil:
RM2 cap/cooling fins on REO Grand
