Heat Transfer
Heat Transfer
Introduction
Thermodynamics
study the effects of adding or removing a quantity of heat
(or energy) to or from a system.
Heat Transfer
study the rate at which the heat (or energy) is transferred.
When two systems are in contact and are at
different temperatures, they will exchange thermal
energy
Energy travels from the system of high temperature to the
low one
The rate of exchange is proportional to the temperature
difference
There are three modes of energy transfer
Conduction
Convection
Radiation
dT
q x " k
dx
If the temperature distribution is linear
dT
becomes dx
T2 T1 T2 T1
x2 x1 L
T1
T2 qx "
x1 x2
L
Example 1.1
Calculate the rate of heat transfer through a pane of window glass
(k=0.78W/m K) 1 m high, 0.5 cm thick, and 0.5 m wide, if the outer
surface temperature is 24oC and the inner surface temperature is
24.5oC.
y
24.5oC
1m x
24oC
0.5 m
0.5 cm
Solution
Assumptions:
Steady-State conditions
One-dimensional conduction through the window
Constant thermal conductivity
1.2 Convection
Cold
T ρ
T ρ
Hot
Convection with latent heat exchange: Associated with a phase
change between liquid and vapor (boiling and condensation)
Moist Air
Water
q” Droplets
q”
Vapor Cold
Water Water
Bubbles
Hot plate
The basic equation for convection heat transfer was
defined by Newton and is usually referred to as the
Newton rate equation:
q
hT
A
Where q = heat transfer rate (W or Btu/hr)
A = area normal to direction of heat flux (ft2, m2)
h =convection heat transfer coefficient,
(Wm-2K-1, Btu hr-1 ft-2 oF-1)
Or
q " hT
Where q "= heat flux (W/m )2
When using above equation, tricky part is
the determination of h. It depends upon the
following factors:
Typeof convection: Free (natural) or Forced
Geometry
Type of flow: Laminar: heat transfer is through
conduction between streamlines.
Turbulent: heat transfer due to conduction and
macroscopic movement of fluid in the direction
of the heat transfer. Therefore the convective
heat transfer coefficient is usually higher than
that of laminar flow.
Note1: The given convective equation is a
definition that simplifies the problem of
convective heat transfer, this is not a law.
Note 2: Often it is necessary to distinguish
between the local and average convective
heat transfer coefficients (hx, h)
Note 3: The convective heat transfer
coefficient is not an inherent property of the
material. But it will depend on the density,
viscosity , velocity and for free convection
on the thermal coefficient of expansion of
the fluid
Example 1.2
Calculate the rate of heat transfer by natural convection between a
shed roof of area 20m x 20m and ambient air, if the roof surface
temperature is 27oC the air temperature is -3oC and the average
convection heat transfer coefficient is 10W/m2K.
20 m
Troof = 20 oC 20 m
1.3 Radiation
Eb Ts4
Eb Ts4
0 1
Radiation can also be reflected or transmitted
G E
G
G
Special Case
Here the net rate of radiation heat transfer from the surface can be
Expressed as
q
qrad " EbTs G Ts Tsur
A
4 4
It is often convenient to linearize the
radiation rate equation and express it in a
manner similar to convection:
qrad hr A Ts Tsur
Where
hr Ts Tsur T T s
2 2
sur
Note: hr depends strongly on temperature,
while the temperature dependence of the
convection heat transfer coefficient h is
generally weak.
Example 1.3
A long, cylindrical electrically heated rod, 2 cm in diameter, is
installed in a vacuum furnace as shown below. The surface of the
heating rod is maintained at 1000 K, while the interior walls of the
furnace are black and are at 800 K. Calculate the net rate at which
heat is lost from the rod per unit length and the radiation heat
transfer coefficient.
Solution
• Assumptions:
– Steady-State conditions
– Radiation exchange between the electrically
heated rod and the furnace is between a small surface
and in much larger enclosure
– The surface emissivity and absorptivity are equal
One-Dimensional Steady-State Conduction
Conduction problems may involve multiple directions and time-
dependent conditions
d dT
k 0 qx is constant
dx dx
x
T ( x) (Ts,2 Ts,1 ) Ts,1
L
Temperature varies linearly with x
Thermal Resistance
Based on the previous solution, the conduction hear transfer rate can be
calculated:
qx kA
dT kA
Ts,1 Ts,2 Ts,1 Ts,2
dx L L / kA
Similarly for heat convection, Newton’s law of cooling applies:
(TS T )
qx hA(TS T )
1 / hA
And for radiation heat transfer:
(Ts Tsur )
qrad hr A(Ts Tsur )
1 / hr A
Recall electric circuit theory - Ohm’s law for electrical resistance:
Potential Differenc e
Electric current
Resistance
Thermal Resistance
• We can use this electrical analogy to represent heat transfer problems
using the concept of a thermal circuit (equivalent to an electrical circuit).
L 1 1
Rt ,cond , Rt ,conv , Rt ,rad
kA hA hr A
Thermal Resistance
Cold fluid for Plane
Wall
T ,1 T , 2 , h2
Ts ,1
T,1 Ts,1 Ts,1 Ts,2 Ts,2 T,2
qx
Ts ,2 1 / h1 A L / kA 1 / h2 A
In terms of overall
T ,1 , h1 qx
T , 2 temperature difference:
T,1 T,2
Hot fluid x=0 x=L qx
Rtot
x
1 L 1
Rtot
h1 A kA h2 A
Composite Walls
Express the following
geometry in terms of a
an equivalent thermal
circuit.
Composite Walls
What is the heat transfer rate for this system?
q x UA T
T
Alternatively 1
Rtot Rt
q UA