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Steady Heat Conduction

This document discusses steady heat conduction through plane walls. It introduces thermal resistance concepts that allow heat transfer problems to be solved without differential equations, where thermal resistance corresponds to electrical resistance, temperature difference corresponds to voltage, and heat transfer rate corresponds to current. It provides an example of steady heat conduction through a house wall during winter, noting heat is lost outward through the wall in the normal direction. Diagrams show a thermal resistance network for a plane wall, noting the heat transfer area and thermal resistances in series. Surface temperatures are not needed to evaluate the steady heat transfer rate if the convection coefficients and fluid temperatures are known.

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Omar Ezzat
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
12 views

Steady Heat Conduction

This document discusses steady heat conduction through plane walls. It introduces thermal resistance concepts that allow heat transfer problems to be solved without differential equations, where thermal resistance corresponds to electrical resistance, temperature difference corresponds to voltage, and heat transfer rate corresponds to current. It provides an example of steady heat conduction through a house wall during winter, noting heat is lost outward through the wall in the normal direction. Diagrams show a thermal resistance network for a plane wall, noting the heat transfer area and thermal resistances in series. Surface temperatures are not needed to evaluate the steady heat transfer rate if the convection coefficients and fluid temperatures are known.

Uploaded by

Omar Ezzat
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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STEADY HEAT CONDUCTION

In heat transfer analysis, we are often interested in the rate of heat transfer through a medium under steady conditions and surface temperatures. Such problems can be solved easily without involving any differential equations by the introduction of thermal resistance concepts in an analogous manner to electrical circuit problems. In this case, the thermal resistance corresponds to electrical resistance, temperature difference corresponds to voltage, and the heat transfer rate corresponds to electric current.

STEADY HEAT CONDUCTION IN PLANE WALLS


Consider steady heat conduction through the walls of a house during a winter day. We know that heat is continuously lost to the outdoors through the wall. We intuitively feel that heat transfer through the wall is in the normal direction to the wall surface, and no significant heat transfer takes place in the wall in other directions (Fig. 31).

Thermal Resistance Network

Note that
the heat transfer area A is constant for a plane wall the rate of heat transfer through a wall separating two mediums is equal to the temperature difference divided by the total thermal resistance between the mediums. the thermal resistances are in series, and the equivalent thermal resistance is determined by simply adding the individual resistances.

Note that
we do not need to know the surface temperatures of the wall in order to evaluate the rate of steady heat transfer through it. All we need to know is the convection heat transfer coefficients and the fluid temperatures on both sides of the wall. The surface temperature of the wall can be determined from

Multilayer Plane Walls

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