Week 3 - Conduction
Week 3 - Conduction
Chapter 17
STEADY HEAT CONDUCTION
Lecture slides by
Mehmet Kanoğlu
Copyright © 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Objectives
• Understand the concept of thermal resistance and its
limitations, and develop thermal resistance networks for
practical heat conduction problems
• Solve steady conduction problems that involve multilayer
rectangular, cylindrical, or spherical geometries
• Develop an intuitive understanding of thermal contact
resistance, and circumstances under which it may be
significant
• Identify applications in which insulation may actually
increase heat transfer
• Analyze finned surfaces, and assess how efficiently and
effectively fins enhance heat transfer
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17-1 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
3
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.
4
Thermal Resistance Concept
5
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.
8
Temperature drop
U overall heat
transfer coefficient
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17-2 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.
A typical experimental
setup for the
determination of thermal
contact resistance
16
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.
19
The thermal contact conductance is highest (and thus the contact
resistance is lowest) for soft metals with smooth surfaces at high pressure. 20
17-3 GENERALIZED THERMAL RESISTANCE
NETWORKS
Thermal
resistance
network for two
parallel layers. 21
Two assumptions in solving complex
multidimensional heat transfer
problems by treating them as one-
dimensional using the thermal
resistance network are
(1) any plane wall normal to the x-axis is
isothermal (i.e., to assume the
temperature to vary in the x-direction
only)
(2) any plane parallel to the x-axis is
adiabatic (i.e., to assume heat transfer Thermal resistance network for
to occur in the x-direction only) combined series-parallel
Do they give the same result? 22
arrangement.
A 17-m-high and 5-m-wide wall consists of long 16-cm x
22-cm cross section horizontal bricks (k=0.72 W/m·°C)
separated by 3-cm-thick plaster layers (k=0.22 W/m·°C).
There are also 2-cm-thick plaster layers on each side of the
brick and a 3-cm-thick rigid foam (k=0.026 W/m·°C) on the
inner side of the wall, as shown in Fig. 17–21. The indoor
and the outdoor temperatures are 20°C and -10°C,
respectively, and the convection heat transfer coefficients
on the inner and the outer sides are h1 =10 W/m2 ·°C and
h2 =25 W/m2·°C, respectively. Assuming one-dimensional
heat transfer and disregarding radiation, determine the rate
of heat transfer through the wall.
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17-4 HEAT CONDUCTION IN CYLINDERS AND
SPHERES
Heat transfer through the pipe
can be modeled as steady
and one-dimensional.
The temperature of the pipe
depends on one direction only
(the radial r-direction) and can
be expressed as T = T(r).
The temperature is
independent of the azimuthal
angle or the axial distance.
This situation is approximated
in practice in long cylindrical
Heat is lost from a hot-water pipe to
pipes and spherical
the air outside in the radial direction,
containers.
and thus heat transfer from a long
pipe is one-dimensional. 25
A long cylindrical pipe (or spherical
shell) with specified inner and outer
surface temperatures T1 and T2.
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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:
30
Heat loss through an insulated
steam pipe
Steam at T∞1 = 320°C flows in a cast iron pipe (k = 80 W/m
·°C) whose inner and outer diameters are D1 = 5 cm and D2
= 5.5 cm, respectively. The pipe is covered with 17-cm-
thick glass wool insulation with k =0.05 W/m ·°C. Heat is
lost to the surroundings at T∞2 =5°C by natural convection
and radiation, with a combined heat transfer coefficient of
h2 =18 W/m2 ·°C. Taking the heat transfer coefficient inside
the pipe to be h1 = 60 W/m2·°C, determine the rate of heat
loss from the steam per unit length of the pipe. Also
determine the temperature drops across the pipe shell and
the insulation.
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Heat transfer to a spherical
container
A 17-m internal diameter spherical tank made of 2-cm-thick
stainless steel (k =15 W/m·°C) is used to store iced water
at T∞1 =0°C. The tank is located in a room whose
temperature is T∞2 = 22°C. The walls of the room are also
at 22°C. The outer surface of the tank is black and heat
transfer between the outer surface of the tank and the
surroundings is by natural convection and radiation. The
convection heat transfer coefficients at the inner and the
outer surfaces of the tank are h1 = 80 W/m2·°C and h2 =10
W/m2 ·°C, respectively. Determine the rate of heat transfer
to the iced water in the tank
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17-5 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. 35
The critical radius of insulation
for a cylindrical body:
37
The thin plate fins of a car
radiator greatly increase the
rate of heat transfer to the air.
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Fin Equation
Differential
Volume element of a fin at location x equation
having a length of x, cross-sectional Temperature
area of Ac, and perimeter of p. excess 39
The general solution of the
differential equation
40
Under steady conditions, heat
transfer from the exposed surfaces
of the fin is equal to heat conduction
to the fin at the base.
The rate of heat transfer from the fin could also
be determined by considering heat transfer from
a differential volume element of the fin and
integrating it over the entire surface of the fin:
42
3 Specified Temperature (Tfin,tip = TL)
In this case the temperature at the end of the fin (the fin tip) is
fixed at a specified temperature TL.
This case could be considered as a generalization of the case of
Infinitely Long Fin where the fin tip temperature was fixed at T.
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4 Convection from Fin Tip
The fin tips, in practice, are exposed to the surroundings, and thus the proper
boundary condition for the fin tip is convection that may also include the effects
of radiation. Consider the case of convection only at the tip. The condition
at the fin tip can be obtained from an energy balance at the fin tip.
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A practical way of accounting for the
heat loss from the fin tip is to replace
the fin length L in the relation for the
insulated tip case by a corrected
length defined as
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Zero thermal resistance or infinite
thermal conductivity (Tfin = Tb)
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Efficiency of straight fins of rectangular, triangular, and parabolic profiles.
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Efficiency of annular fins of constant thickness t.
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• Fins with triangular and parabolic profiles contain less material
and are more efficient than the ones with rectangular profiles.
• The fin efficiency decreases with increasing fin length. Why?
• How to choose fin length? Increasing the length of the fin
beyond a certain value cannot be justified unless the added
benefits outweigh the added cost.
• Fin lengths that cause the fin efficiency to drop below 60 percent
usually cannot be justified economically.
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• The efficiency of most fins used in practice is above 90 percent.
Fin
Effectiveness
The
effectiveness
of a fin
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• Heat sinks: Specially
designed finned surfaces
which are commonly used in
the cooling of electronic
equipment, and involve one-
of-a-kind complex
geometries.
• The heat transfer
performance of heat sinks is
usually expressed in terms of
their thermal resistances R.
• A small value of thermal
resistance indicates a small
temperature drop across the
heat sink, and thus a high fin
efficiency.
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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
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