ME 320 HW7 Solutions
ME 320 HW7 Solutions
Homework Assignment 7
• Homework must be submitted to our course website in an electronic format as a single PDF file.
Each page must be clean, legible, and in an upright orientation. The PDF can be created by using
your preferred app or generated from scanned pages.
• Homework must be submitted on time. An extension of two days can be granted automatically,
but it will be accompanied by a 20% reduction in your score. No homework will be accepted after
an extension. If you need an extension of more than 2 days, you must contact the instructor to
ask for an extra extension by email in advance. It will be considered on a case-by-case basis.
• Unlimited submissions may be made, however, only the final submission will be graded.
• Your homework submission must represent your own understanding. You are encouraged to
attempt homework problems individually at first, followed by discussions with your peers, but do
not duplicate anyone’s work. Any duplication identified during the grading process will result in
sanctions according to the Academic Integrity Policy in the Student Code.
• Your work will be graded on correctness. Your work must be neat and complete to receive full
credit. “Complete” means (1) “Known”, “Find”, “Schematic”, “Assumptions”, and “Analysis” must
be presented in your solutions; (2) all the steps showing how you reach your final answer must be
presented in “Analysis”; (3) words must be used to explain your thoughts, not just equations.
Assignment:
Solve the following problems in the textbook, Fundamentals of Heat and Mass Transfer, 8th Ed., by
Bergman and Lavine.
Text Example 5.6 with the updated information of the sphere radius 6 mm.
5.38
5.48 (Hint: the values of the zero-order Bessel function of the first kind, i.e. 𝐽0 , can be found in text
Appendix B.4; assume Fo>0.2 to make the approximate solution of the dimensionless temperature
applicable to this problem.)
5.57 (AISI 304 stainless steel at around 500 °C: k = 22.2 W/(m-K), cp = 579 J/(kg-K), ρ = 7900 kg/m3, α = 4.85
x 10-6 m2/s.)
6.1
Text Example 6.3 with the updated measured water-vapor partial pressure pA dependence on y coordinate
as shown below. The measured water-vapor partial pressure at the water surface is 0.2 atm. (Hint: The
values of DAB listed in text Appendix Table A.8 are for the binary pairs at a given temperature and one
atmospheric pressure. As indicated in the notes b right below Table A.8, DAB is a function of pressure and
temperature, i.e. 𝐷𝐴𝐵 ∝ 𝑝−1 𝑇 3⁄2, with T in Kelvin. Thus, for the conditions out of the given temperature
and one atmospheric pressure, the value of DAB listed in Table A.8 can be corrected for the temperature
and pressure of interest.)
Text Example 6.4 with the updated water flow velocity of 𝑢∞ = 1.5 m/s.
• 10/10 = perfect
• 9/10 = very minor mistake(s) including sign error, calculation error
• 8/10 = understood the problem but made a serious mistake
• 5/10 = major mistakes, difficulty understanding the problem, incomplete
• 3/10 = made some kind of attempt at the problem
• 0/10 = no attempt/skipped problem or duplicate anyone’s work
Text Example 5.6 with the updated information of the sphere radius 6 mm.
(b)
Text Example 6.3 with the updated measured water-vapor partial pressure pA dependence on y
coordinate as shown below. The measured water-vapor partial pressure at the water surface is 0.2 atm.
Text Example 6.4 with the updated water flow velocity of 𝑢∞ = 1.5 m/s.
For 5 Extra HW Credit Points (Optional):