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Thermodynamics and Propulsion | |
16.6 Muddiest Points on Chapter 16
MP 16..1
How do we quantify the contribution of each mode of heat
transfer in a given situation?
Developing the insight necessary to address the important parts of a complex situation (such as turbine heat transfer) and downplay (neglect or treat approximately) the other aspects is part of having a solid working knowledge of the fundamentals. This is an important issue, because otherwise every problem will seem very complex. One way to sort out what is important is to make order of magnitude estimates (similar to what we did to answer when the one-dimensional heat transfer approximation was appropriate) to see whether all three modes have to be considered. Sometimes one can rule out one or two modes on the basis of the problem statement. For example if there were a vacuum between the two surfaces in the thermos bottle, we would not have to consider convection, but often the situation is more subtle.
MP 16..2
How specific do we need to be about when the one-dimensional
assumption is valid? Is it enough to say that
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The answer really is ``be specific enough to enable one to have
confidence in the analysis or at least some idea of how good the
answer is.'' This is a challenge that comes up a great deal. For
now, if we say that
MP 16..3
Why is the thermal conductivity of light gases such as
helium (monoatomic) or hydrogen (diatomic) much higher than heavier
gases such as argon (monoatomic) or nitrogen (diatomic)?
To answer this, we need some basics of the kinetic theory of gases. A reference for this is Castellan, Physical Chemistry, Benjamin/Cummings Publishers, 1986. Two factors contribute, the collision cross section and the average molecular velocity. For the gases mentioned above the dominant factor appears to be the velocity. The kinetic energy per molecule at a given temperature is the same and so the lower the molecular weight the higher the average molecular velocity.
MP 16..4
What do you mean by continuous?
The meaning is similar to the definition you have seen in the math
subjects. A way to state it is that the function at a given location
has the same value as we approach the location independent of the
direction we approach from. To say this in a more physical manner,
the temperature as a function of
MP 16..5
Why is temperature continuous in the composite wall problem?
Why is it continuous at the interface between two materials?
We can argue this point by supposing
MP 16..6
Why is the temperature gradient
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As derived in class, across an interface the heat flux is
continuous. From the first law, for a thin control volume that
encloses the interface the net heat flow into the control volume is
zero. As sketched in Figure 16.12, the
contribution from the heat flux at the upper and lower ends of the
control volume is negligible so the heat flux in one side must be
the same as the flux out of the other. The heat flux, however, is
related to the temperature gradient by
MP 16..7
Why is
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In terms of the bolt through the wood wall, the approximation made
is that the bolt and the wood are both exposed to the same
conditions at the two sides of the wall. The relative areas of the
bolt and the wood indeed do matter. Suppose we consider a square
meter area of wood without bolts. It has a certain heat resistance.
If we now add bolts to the wall, the resistance of each bolt
is
which is larger than unity. In summary, the amount by which the heat transfer is increased depends on the fractional area with low thermal resistance compared to the fractional area with high thermal resistance. UnifiedTP |