Heat 4e Chap02 Lecture
Heat 4e Chap02 Lecture
Fourth Edition
Yunus A. Cengel, Afshin J. Ghajar
McGraw-Hill, 2011
Chapter 2
HEAT CONDUCTION
EQUATION
Mehmet Kanoglu
University of Gaziantep
Copyright 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Objectives
INTRODUCTION
Although heat transfer and temperature are closely related, they are of a
different nature.
Temperature has only magnitude. It is a scalar quantity.
Heat transfer has direction as well as magnitude. It is a vector quantity.
We work with a coordinate system and indicate direction with plus or minus
signs.
The driving force for any form of heat transfer is the temperature
difference.
The larger the temperature difference, the larger the rate of heat transfer.
In the most general case, heat transfer through a medium is threedimensional. However, some problems can be classified as two- or
one-dimensional depending on the relative magnitudes of heat
transfer rates in different directions and the level of accuracy desired.
The rate of heat conduction through a medium in a specified direction (say, in the x-direction)
is expressed by Fouriers law of heat conduction for one-dimensional heat conduction as:
Examples:
electrical energy being converted to heat at a rate of I2R,
fuel elements of nuclear reactors,
exothermic chemical reactions.
Heat generation is a volumetric phenomenon.
The rate of heat generation units : W/m3 or Btu/hft3.
The rate of heat generation in a medium may vary with time as well as
position within the medium.
Heat
Generation
10
11
Heat Conduction
Equation in a Large
Plane Wall
(2-6)
12
13
Heat
Conduction
Equation in a
Long Cylinder
14
15
16
18
Rectangular Coordinates
19
20
21
Cylindrical Coordinates
Relations between the coordinates of a point in rectangular
and cylindrical coordinate systems:
22
Spherical Coordinates
Relations between the coordinates of a point in rectangular
and spherical coordinate systems:
23
Boundary Conditions
Specified Temperature Boundary Condition
Specified Heat Flux Boundary Condition
Convection Boundary Condition
Radiation Boundary Condition
Interface Boundary Conditions
Generalized Boundary Conditions
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
temperature coefficient
of thermal conductivity.
The average value of thermal conductivity
in the temperature range T1 to T2 in this
case can be determined from
Summary
Introduction
Steady versus Transient Heat Transfer
Multidimensional Heat Transfer
Heat Generation
48