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Ch1 Introduction

This document provides an introduction to heat transfer. It defines heat transfer as dealing with the rates of energy transfer between systems due to temperature differences, while thermodynamics deals with equilibrium states and changes between them. The three main modes of heat transfer are conduction, convection and radiation. Conduction involves energy transfer between adjacent particles through collisions. The rate of conductive heat transfer is proportional to the area, temperature difference and inversely proportional to thickness as defined by Fourier's Law.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
22 views

Ch1 Introduction

This document provides an introduction to heat transfer. It defines heat transfer as dealing with the rates of energy transfer between systems due to temperature differences, while thermodynamics deals with equilibrium states and changes between them. The three main modes of heat transfer are conduction, convection and radiation. Conduction involves energy transfer between adjacent particles through collisions. The rate of conductive heat transfer is proportional to the area, temperature difference and inversely proportional to thickness as defined by Fourier's Law.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 39

Introduction to Heat Transfer

EMB 3313
Mechanical Engineering, MIU
Nurfadzylah

1
Learning Objectives
◼ At the end of this chapter, students should
be able to:
1. Identify the important heat transfer modes in a
physical system.
2. Explain the conservation of energy requirement
3. Explain the relevance of heat transfer

2
Thermodynamics and Heat Transfer
• The science of thermodynamics deals with the
amount of heat transfer as a system undergoes
a process from one equilibrium state to
another, and makes no reference to how long
the process will take.
• The science of heat transfer deals
with the determination of the rates
of energy that can be transferred
from one system to another as a
result of temperature difference.
Thermodynamics and Heat Transfer
• Thermodynamics deals with equilibrium states
and changes from one equilibrium state to
another. Heat transfer, on the other hand, deals
with systems that lack thermal equilibrium, and
thus it is a nonequilibrium phenomenon.
• Therefore, the study of heat transfer cannot be
based on the principles of thermodynamics
alone.
• However, the laws of thermodynamics lay the
framework for the science of heat transfer.
Heat Transfer
• The basic requirement for heat transfer is the presence
of a temperature difference.
• The second law requires that heat
be transferred in the direction of
decreasing temperature.
• The temperature difference is the driving force for
heat transfer.
• The rate of heat transfer in a certain direction depends
on the magnitude of the temperature gradient in that
direction.
• The larger the temperature gradient, the higher the
rate of heat transfer.
Application Areas of Heat Transfer
Heat and Other Forms of Energy
• Energy can exist in numerous forms such as:
– thermal,
– mechanical,
– kinetic,
– potential,
– electrical,
– magnetic,
– chemical, and
– nuclear.
• Their sum constitutes the total energy E (or e on a
unit mass basis) of a system.
• The sum of all microscopic forms of energy is called
the internal energy of a system.
• Internal energy may be viewed as the sum of
the kinetic and potential energies of the
molecules.
• The kinetic energy of the molecules is called
sensible heat.
• The internal energy associated with the phase
of a system is called latent heat.
• The internal energy associated with the atomic
bonds in a molecule is called chemical (or bond)
energy.
• The internal energy associated with the bonds
within the nucleus of the atom itself is called
nuclear energy.
Exercise 1
• A 15-cm x 20-cm circuit board houses on its surface
120 closely spaced logic chips, each dissipating 0.12
W. If the heat transfer from the back surface of the
board is negligible, determine:
a. The amount of heat this circuit board dissipates during a
10-hour period, in kWh, and
b. The heat flux on the surface of the circuit board, in
W/m2.

11/23/2021 EMB 3313 Heat Transfer 9


Solution 1

11/23/2021 EMB 3313 Heat Transfer 10


Internal Energy and Enthalpy
• In the analysis of systems
that involve fluid flow,
we frequently encounter
the combination of
properties u and Pv.
• The combination is
defined as enthalpy
(h=u+Pv).
• The term Pv represents
the flow energy of the
fluid (also called the flow
work).
Specific Heats of Gases, Liquids, and Solids
• Specific heat is defined as the energy required to
raise the temperature of a unit mass of a substance
by one degree.
• Two kinds of specific heats:
– specific heat at constant volume cv, and
– specific heat at constant pressure cp.
• The specific heats of a substance, in general, depend
on two independent properties such as temperature
and pressure.
• For an ideal gas, however, they depend on
temperature only.
Specific Heats
• At low pressures all real gases approach ideal gas
behavior, and therefore their specific heats depend on
temperature only.
• A substance whose specific volume (or density) does
not change with temperature or pressure is called an
incompressible substance.
• The constant-volume and constant-pressure specific
heats are identical for incompressible
substances.
• The specific heats of incompressible
substances depend on temperature
only.
Energy Transfer
• Energy can be transferred to or from a given mass by two
mechanisms:
– heat transfer, and
– work.
• The amount of heat transferred during a process is denoted by Q.

• The amount of heat transferred per unit time is called heat
transfer rate, and is denoted by Q.
• The total amount of heat transfer Q during a time interval Dt can
be determined from Dt
Q =  Qdt (J) (1-6)
0
• The rate of heat transfer per unit area normal to the direction of
heat transfer is called heat flux, and the average heat flux is
expressed as Q
q= (W/m2 ) (1-8)
A
The First Law of Thermodynamics
• The first law of thermodynamics states that energy
can neither be created nor destroyed during a process;
it can only change forms.
Total energy Total energy Change in the
entering the - leaving the =total energy of (1-9)
system system the system

• The energy balance for any system undergoing any


process can be expressed as (in the rate form)
Ein − Eout = dEsystem dt (W) (1-11)

Rate of net energy Rate of change in


transfer internal kinetic, potential,
by heat, work, and mass etc., energies
• In heat transfer problems it is convenient to
write a heat balance and to treat the conversion
of nuclear, chemical, mechanical, and electrical
energies into thermal energy as heat generation.
• The energy balance in that case can be
expressed as
Qin − Qout + Egen = DEthermal ,system (J) (1-13)
Net heat Heat Change in
transfer generati thermal
on energy of the
system
Energy Balance
Closed systems Steady-Flow Systems
• Stationary closed • For system with one inlet and
system, no work: one exit:
Q = mcv DT (J) min = mout = m (kg/s)
(1-15) • When kinetic and potential
energies are negligible, and
there is no work interaction
Q = mDh = mc p DT (kJ/s)
(1-18)
Heat Transfer Mechanisms
• Heat can be transferred in three basic modes:
– conduction,
– convection,
– radiation.
• All modes of heat
transfer require the
existence of a temperature difference.
• All modes are from the high-temperature
medium to a lower-temperature one.
Conduction
• Conduction is the transfer of energy from the more
energetic particles of a substance to the adjacent less
energetic ones as a result of interactions between the
particles.
• Conduction can take place in solids,
liquids, or gases
– In gases and liquids conduction is due to
the collisions and diffusion of the
molecules during their random motion.
– In solids conduction is due to the
combination of vibrations of the
molecules in a lattice and the energy
transport by free electrons.
Conduction

Rate of heat conduction 


( Area )( Temperature difference )
Thickness
T1 − T2 DT
Qcond = kA = −kA (W) (1-21)
Dx Dx

where the constant of proportionality k is the


thermal conductivity of the material.
In differential form
dT (1-22)
Qcond = −kA (W)
dx
which is called Fourier’s law of heat conduction.
Exercise 2
• The inner and outer surface of a 5-m x 6-m brick wall
of thickness 30 cm and thermal conductivity 0.69
W/m.C are maintained at temperatures of 20oC and
5oC, respectively. Determine the rate of heat transfer
through the wall, in W.

Brick wall

0.3 m
30 cm

20C 5C

21
Solution 2
The inner and outer surfaces of a brick wall are maintained at specified
temperatures. The rate of heat transfer through the wall is to be determined.
Assumptions 1 Steady operating conditions exist since the surface
temperatures of the wall remain constant at the specified values. 2
Thermal properties of the wall are constant.
Properties The thermal conductivity of the wall is given to be k = 0.69 W/mC.
Analysis Under steady conditions, the rate of heat transfer through the wall is

Brick
DT (20 − 5)C wall
Q cond = kA = (0.69W/m  C)(5  6m 2 ) = 1035W
L 0.3m
0.3 m
30
cm
20C 5C

22
Thermal Conductivity
• The thermal conductivity of a material is a
measure of the ability of the material to
conduct heat.
• High value for thermal conductivity
good heat conductor
• Low value
poor heat conductor or
insulator.
Thermal Conductivities of Materials
• The thermal conductivities
of gases such as air vary by
a factor of 104 from those
of pure metals such as
copper.
• Pure crystals and metals
have the highest thermal
conductivities, and gases
and insulating materials
the lowest.
Thermal Conductivities and Temperature

• The thermal conductivities


of materials vary with
temperature.
• The temperature
dependence of thermal
conductivity causes
considerable complexity in
conduction analysis.
• A material is normally
assumed to be isotropic.
Thermal diffusivity
Heat conducted k
= = ( m2 s ) (1-23)
Heat stored cp
• The thermal diffusivity represents how fast heat
diffuses through a material.
• Appears in the transient heat conduction analysis.
• A material that has a high thermal conductivity or a
low heat capacity will have a large thermal diffusivity.
• The larger the thermal diffusivity, the faster the
propagation of heat into the medium.
Exercise 3
• If 3 kW is conducted through a section of insulating
material 1.0m2 in cross section and 2.5cm thick and
the thermal conductivity may be taken as 0.2 W/m.C,
compute the temperature difference across the
material?
Solution
(3000)(0.0 25)
DT = = 375o C
(0.2)(1)

11/23/2021 BMCG 2123 Heat Transfer 27


Convection
Convection = Conduction + Advection
(fluid motion)
• Convection is the mode of energy transfer between a
solid surface and the adjacent liquid or gas that is in
motion.
• Convection is commonly classified into three sub-
modes:
– Forced convection,
– Natural (or free) convection,
– Change of phase (liquid/vapor,
solid/liquid, etc.)
Convection
• The rate of convection heat transfer is expressed by
Newton’s law of cooling as
Qconv = hAs (Ts − T ) (W) (1-24)
• h is the convection heat transfer coefficient in
W/m2°C.
• h depends on variables such as the
surface geometry, the nature of fluid
motion, the properties of the fluid,
and the bulk fluid velocity.
Radiation
• Radiation is the energy emitted by matter in the form of
electromagnetic waves (or photons) as a result of the
changes in the electronic configurations of the atoms or
molecules.
• Heat transfer by radiation does not require the presence
of an intervening medium.
• In heat transfer studies we are interested in thermal
radiation (radiation emitted by bodies because of their
temperature).
• Radiation is a volumetric phenomenon. However,
radiation is usually considered to be a surface
phenomenon for solids that are opaque to thermal
radiation.
Radiation - Emission
• The maximum rate of radiation that can be emitted from a
surface at a thermodynamic temperature Ts (in K or R) is given
by the Stefan–Boltzmann law as
Q = s A T 4 (W)
emit ,max s s
(1-25)
• s =5.670X108 W/m2·K4 is the Stefan–Boltzmann constant.
• The idealized surface that emits radiation at this maximum
rate is called a blackbody.
• The radiation emitted by all real surfaces is less than the
radiation emitted by a blackbody at the same temperature,
and is expressed as
Qemit ,max = es AsTs 4
(W) (1-26)

0  e 1
• e is the emissivity of the surface.
Radiation - Absorption
• The fraction of the
radiation energy incident
on a surface that is
absorbed by the surface is
termed the absorptivity .

0   1
• Both e and  of a surface depend on the
temperature and the wavelength of the radiation.
Exercise 4
• A small radiant heater has metal strips 6 mm wide
with a total length of 3 m. The surface emissivity of
the strips is 0.85. To what temperature must the
strips be heated if they are to dissipate 1600 W of
heat to a room at 25oC?
Solution
(
q = s  A (T1 ) − (T2 )
4 4
)
(
1600 W = (5.669 10 -8 )(0.85 )(0.006 )(3) (T1 ) − (298 )
4 4
)
T1 = 1167 K

33
34
Summary
• The basics of heat transfer are introduced.
• The science of thermodynamic deals with the
amount of heat transfer as a system undergoes a
process from one equilibrium state to another,
whereas the science of heat transfer deals with the
rate of heat transfer as main quantity.
• Heat transfer is the exchange of the sensible and
latent forms of internal energy between two medium
as a result of a temperature difference.

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