Heat Transfer Basics
Heat Transfer Basics
Heat Transfer Basics
Copyright 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
3
3
Energy Transfer
Energy can be transferred to or from a given
mass by two mechanisms:
when
is constant:
CONDUCTION
Conduction: 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.
In gases and liquids, conduction is due to the
collisions and diffusion of the molecules during their
random motion.
In solids, it is due to the combination of vibrations of
the molecules in a lattice and the energy transport by
free electrons.
The rate of heat conduction through a plane layer is
proportional to the temperature difference across the
layer and the heat transfer area, but is inversely
proportional to the thickness of the layer.
Heat conduction
through a large plane
wall of thickness x
and area A.
5
When x 0
Fouriers law of
heat conduction
In heat conduction
analysis, A represents
the area normal to the
direction of heat
transfer.
Thermal
Conductivity
Thermal conductivity: The rate of heat transfer through a
unit thickness of the material per unit area per unit
temperature difference.
The thermal conductivity of a material is a measure of the
ability of the material to conduct heat.
A high value for thermal conductivity indicates that the
material is a good heat conductor, and a low value indicates
that the material is a poor heat conductor or insulator.
The range of
thermal
conductivity of
various
materials at
room
temperature.
Thermal Diffusivity
cp Specific heat, J/kg C: Heat capacity
per unit mass
cp Heat capacity, J/m3C: Heat capacity
per unit volume
Thermal diffusivity, m2/s: Represents
how fast heat diffuses through a material
Problem
One wall of a house consists of 0.019-m-thick
plywood backed by 0.076-m-thick insulation.
The temperature at the inside surface is 25C,
while the temperature at the outside surface is
4 C, both being constant.
The thermal conductivities of the insulation
and the plywood are, respectively, 0.030 and
0.080 W/(mK), and the area of the wall is 35
m2. Find the heat conducted through the wall
in one hour (a) with the insulation and (b)
without the insulation.
11
(a)
12
(b)
13
CONVECTION
Convection: The mode of
energy transfer between a
solid surface and the
adjacent liquid or gas that is
in motion, and it involves
the combined effects of
conduction and fluid motion.
The faster the fluid motion,
the greater the convection
heat transfer.
In the absence of any bulk
fluid motion, heat transfer
between a solid surface and
the adjacent fluid is by pure
conduction.
14
Forced convection: If
the fluid is forced to flow
over the surface by
external means such as
a fan, pump, or the wind.
Natural (or free)
convection: If the fluid
motion is caused by
buoyancy forces that are
induced by density
differences due to the
variation of temperature
in the fluid.
Heat transfer processes that involve change of phase of a fluid are also
considered to be convection because of the fluid motion induced during
the process, such as the rise of the vapor bubbles during boiling or the
fall of the liquid droplets during condensation.
15
RADIATION
Radiation: 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.
Unlike conduction and convection, the transfer of heat by radiation does
not require the presence of an intervening medium.
In fact, heat transfer by radiation is fastest (at the speed of light) and it
suffers no attenuation in a vacuum. This is how the energy of the sun
reaches the earth.
In heat transfer studies we are interested in thermal radiation, which is
the form of radiation emitted by bodies because of their temperature.
All bodies at a temperature above absolute zero emit thermal radiation.
17
StefanBoltzmann law
= 5.670 108 W/m2 K4 StefanBoltzmann constant
Blackbody: The idealized surface that emits radiation at the maximum rate.
Radiation emitted
by real surfaces
Emissivity : A measure of how closely
a surface approximates a blackbody for
which = 1 of the surface. 0 1.
18
19
20