Heat Transfer Chap03 - Lecture
Heat Transfer Chap03 - Lecture
Heat Transfer Chap03 - Lecture
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STEADY HEAT CONDUCTION IN PLANE WALLS
Heat transfer through the wall of a house can be
modeled as steady and one-dimensional.
The temperature of the wall in this case depends
on one direction only (say the x-direction) and
can be expressed as T(x).
Fourier’s law of
heat conduction
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The rate of heat conduction through
a plane wall is proportional to the
average thermal conductivity, the
wall area, and the temperature
difference, but is inversely
proportional to the wall thickness.
Once the rate of heat conduction is
available, the temperature T(x) at
any location x can be determined by
Under steady conditions, the
replacing T2 by T, and L by x.
temperature distribution in a plane
wall is a straight line: dT/dx = const.
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Thermal Resistance Concept
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Newton’s law of cooling
Schematic for
convection and radiation
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resistances at a surface.
Thermal Resistance Network
The thermal resistance network for heat transfer through a plane wall subjected to
convection on both sides, and the electrical analogy.
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Temperature drop
U overall heat
transfer coefficient
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THERMAL CONTACT RESISTANCE
Temperature distribution and heat flow lines along two solid plates
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pressed against each other for the case of perfect and imperfect contact.
• When two such surfaces are pressed
against each other, the peaks form good
material contact but the valleys form voids
filled with air.
• These numerous air gaps of varying sizes
act as insulation because of the low
thermal conductivity of air.
• Thus, an interface offers some resistance
to heat transfer, and this resistance per
unit interface area is called the thermal
contact resistance, Rc.
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The value of thermal
contact resistance
hc thermal contact depends on:
conductance • surface roughness,
• material properties,
• temperature and
pressure at the
interface
• type of fluid trapped
at the interface.
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Once heat transfer rate Q has been
calculated, the interface temperature
T2 can be determined from any of the
following two relations:
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CRITICAL RADIUS OF INSULATION
Adding more insulation to a wall or
to the attic always decreases heat
transfer since the heat transfer area
is constant, and adding insulation
always increases the thermal
resistance of the wall without
increasing the convection
resistance.
In a a cylindrical pipe or a spherical
shell, the additional insulation
increases the conduction
resistance of the insulation layer
but decreases the convection An insulated cylindrical pipe exposed to
resistance of the surface because convection from the outer surface and
of the increase in the outer surface the thermal resistance network
area for convection. associated with it.
The heat transfer from the pipe
may increase or decrease,
depending on which effect
dominates. 25
The critical radius of insulation
for a cylindrical body:
(P153E )
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The thin plate fins of a car
radiator greatly increase the
rate of heat transfer to the air.
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Fin Efficiency
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Zero thermal resistance or infinite
thermal conductivity (Tfin = Tb)
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Summary
• Steady Heat Conduction in Plane Walls
Thermal Resistance Concept
Thermal Resistance Network
Multilayer Plane Walls
• Thermal Contact Resistance
• Generalized Thermal Resistance Networks
• Heat Conduction in Cylinders and Spheres
Multilayered Cylinders and Spheres
• Critical Radius of Insulation
• Heat Transfer from Finned Surfaces
Fin Equation
Fin Efficiency
Fin Effectiveness
Proper Length of a Fin
• Heat Transfer in Common Configurations
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