Heat Conduction Equation: BMCG 2123 Faculty of Manufacturing Engineering, Utem Taufik Week 2
Heat Conduction Equation: BMCG 2123 Faculty of Manufacturing Engineering, Utem Taufik Week 2
BMCG 2123
Faculty of Manufacturing Engineering, UTeM
Taufik
Week 2
• which
can be determined from Fourier’s law as
T
Qx kAx x
T
Qy kAy (2-4)
y
T
Qz kAz
z
Heat Generation
• Examples:
– electrical energy being converted to heat at a rate of I2R,
– fuel elements of nuclear reactors,
– exothermic chemical reactions.
• Heat generation is a volumetric phenomenon.
• The rate of heat generation units : W/m3 or Btu/h · ft3.
• The rate of heat generation in a medium may vary with
time as well as position within the medium.
• The total rate of heat generation in a medium of
volume V can be determined from
gen
E e dV (W)
V
gen (2-5)
Exercise 1
• The resistance wire of a 1200-W hair dryer is 80 cm
long and has diameter of D = 0.3 cm. Determine:
a) the rate of heat generation in the wire per unit
volume, in W/cm3, and
b) The heat flux on the outer surface of the wire as
result of this heat generation.
E
Qx Qx x Egen,element
element
t
(2-6)
Eelement
Qx Qx x E gen,element
(2-6)
t
• The change in the energy content and the rate of
heat generation can be expressed as
Eelement Et t Et mc Tt t Tt cAx Tt t Tt (2-7)
Egen ,element e genVelement e gen Ax (2-8)
Eelement
Q r Q r r E gen ,element
t
(2-18)
Eelement
Qr Qr r E gen ,element
(2-18)
t
1 2 T T
Variable conductivity: r k e gen c (2-30)
r r
2
r t
1 2 T e gen 1 T
Constant conductivity: r (2-31)
r r r k
2
t
General Heat Conduction Equation
Three-
dimensional
2T 2T 2T e gen (2-40)
0
1) Steady-state: x 2 y 2 z 2 k
2T 2T 2T 1 T
2) Transient, no heat generation: x 2 y 2 z 2 t (2-41)
2T 2T 2T (2-42)
3) Steady-state, no heat generation: 2 2 2 0
x y z
Exercise 2
• A 2-kW resistance heater with thermal conductivity
k = 15 W/m.K, diameter D = 0.4 cm, and length L =
50 cm is used to boil water by immersing it in water.
Assuming the variation of thermal conductivity of
the wire with temperature to be negligible, obtain
the differential equation that describes the variation
of the temperature in the wire during steady state
operation.
1 T 1 T T T T
rk 2 k k e gen c
r r r r z z t
(2-43)
Spherical Coordinates
1 2 T 1 T 1 T T
kr 2 2 k 2 k sin egen c
r r r r sin r sin t
2
(2-44)
Boundary and Initial Conditions
• Specified Temperature Boundary Condition
• Specified Heat Flux Boundary Condition
• Convection Boundary Condition
• Radiation Boundary Condition
• Interface Boundary Conditions
• Generalized Boundary Conditions
Specified Temperature Boundary
Condition
For one-dimensional heat
transfer through a plane wall of
thickness L, for example, the
specified temperature boundary
conditions can be expressed as
T(0, t) = T1
(2-46)
T(L, t) = T2
k
T (0, t )
0 or
T (0, t )
0
T L , t
2 0
x x x
(2-49) (2-50)
Convection Boundary Condition
Heat Heat
conduction
at the surface = convection
at the surface
in a in the same
selected direction
direction
T (0, t )
k h1 T1 T (0, t ) (2-51a)
x
and
T ( L, t )
k h2 T ( L, t ) T 2 (2-51b)
x
Radiation Boundary Condition
Heat Radiation
conduction
at the surface
= exchange at
the surface in
in a the same
selected direction
direction
T (0, t )
k 1 Tsurr
4
,1 T (0, t ) 4
(2-52a)
x
and
T ( L, t )
k 2 T ( L, t ) 4 Tsurr
4
,2
(2-52b)
x
Interface Boundary Conditions
At the interface the requirements are:
(1) two bodies in contact must have the same temperature
at the area of contact,
(2) an interface (which is a
surface) cannot store any
energy, and thus the heat flux
on the two sides of an
interface must be the same.
e genV
Ts T (2-66)
hAs
Heat Generation in Solids -The Surface
Temperature
For a large plane wall of thickness 2L (As=2Awall
and V=2LAwall)
e gen L
Ts , plane wall T (2-67)
h
For a long solid cylinder of radius r0 (As=2r0L
and V=r02L) e gen r0
Ts ,cylinder T (2-68)
2h
For a solid sphere of radius r0 (As=4r02 and V=4/3r03)
e gen r0
Ts , sphere T (2-69)
3h
Heat Generation in Solids -The maximum
Temperature in a Cylinder (the Centerline)
The heat generated within an inner
cylinder must be equal to the heat
conducted through its outer surface.
dT
kAr e genVr (2-70)
dr
Substituting these expressions into the above
equation and separating the variables, we get
dT e gen
k 2 rL
dr
2
e gen r L dT
2k
rdr
T0 Ts
e gen r02
105 o
0.318x10 W / m 0.002m
9 3 2
126o C
4k 415W / m. C o