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BLDG 476 - Lecture 1 - 2

This document discusses heat transfer through various materials and processes. It introduces the concepts of conduction, convection, and radiation as they relate to boiling water on a stove. It then discusses steady versus transient heat transfer and provides examples of one-dimensional and two-dimensional heat transfer, such as through the walls of a house or a glass window. The document also introduces the concept of isotropic materials which have consistent thermal conductivity in all directions.

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Sara Hayek
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
63 views

BLDG 476 - Lecture 1 - 2

This document discusses heat transfer through various materials and processes. It introduces the concepts of conduction, convection, and radiation as they relate to boiling water on a stove. It then discusses steady versus transient heat transfer and provides examples of one-dimensional and two-dimensional heat transfer, such as through the walls of a house or a glass window. The document also introduces the concept of isotropic materials which have consistent thermal conductivity in all directions.

Uploaded by

Sara Hayek
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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BLDG 476

LECTURE 1
Chapter 1 – introduction
Boiling water on a stove.

From stove Heat conducts as it is directly in contact with the pan.


Due to convection, all the water particles receive heat.
If I put my hand next to the pan, i will feel hotness due to radiation
Moving quickly
Chapter 2 - Heat conduction equation
Heat flux or temperature remain
unchanged with time during steady heat
transfer through a medium at any
location.
For example, heat transfer through the
walls of a house is steady
when the conditions inside the house
and the outdoors remain constant for
several hours. But even in this case, the
temperatures on the inner and outer
surfaces of the wall will be different
unless the temperatures inside and
outside
the house are the same.

The cooling of an apple in a


refrigerator, on the
other hand, is a transient heat transfer
process since the temperature at any
fixed point within the apple will change
with time during cooling. During
transient heat transfer, the temperature
normally varies with time as well as
position
1D example :
Heat transfer through the glass
of a window can be considered to be one-dimensional
since heat transfer
through the glass occurs predominantly in one direction
(the direction normal
to the surface of the glass) and heat transfer in other
directions (from one side
edge to the other and from the top edge to the bottom)
is negligible

2D example :
The steady temperature distribution
in a long bar of rectangular cross section can be
expressed as T(x, y)
if the temperature variation in the z-direction (along
the bar) is negligible and
there is no change with time.
Isotropic material : we do not
need to be concerned
about the variation of properties
with direction such as the
conductivity. So assume that
conductivity is the same in all
directions

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