Fundamentals of Heat and Mass Transfer
7th Edition
ISBN: 9780470501979
Author: Frank P. Incropera, David P. DeWitt, Theodore L. Bergman, Adrienne S. Lavine
Publisher: Wiley, John & Sons, Incorporated
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Chapter 4, Problem 4.72P
To determine
Temperature distribution across the foil.
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Fundamentals of Heat and Mass Transfer
Ch. 4 - In the method of separation of variables (Section...Ch. 4 - A two-dimensional rectangular plate is subjected...Ch. 4 - Consider the two-dimensional rectangular plate of...Ch. 4 - A two-dimensional rectangular plate is subjected...Ch. 4 - A two-dimensional rectangular plate is subjected...Ch. 4 - Using the thermal resistance relations developed...Ch. 4 - Free convection heat transfer is sometimes...Ch. 4 - Consider Problem 4.5 for the case where the plate...Ch. 4 - Prob. 4.9PCh. 4 - Based on the dimensionless conduction heat rates...
Ch. 4 - Determine the heat transfer rate between two...Ch. 4 - A two-dimensional object is subjected to...Ch. 4 - An electrical heater 100 mm long and 5 mm in...Ch. 4 - Two parallel pipelines spaced 0.5 m apart are...Ch. 4 - A small water droplet of diameter D=100m and...Ch. 4 - A tube of diameter 50 mm having a surface...Ch. 4 - Pressurized steam at 450K flows through a long,...Ch. 4 - The temperature distribution in laser-irradiated...Ch. 4 - Hot water at 85°C flows through a thin-walled...Ch. 4 - A furnace of cubical shape, with external...Ch. 4 - Laser beams are used to thermally process...Ch. 4 - A double-glazed window consists of two sheets of...Ch. 4 - A pipeline, used for the transport of crude oil,...Ch. 4 - A long power transmission cable is buried at a...Ch. 4 - A small device is used to measure the surface...Ch. 4 - A cubical glass melting furnace has exterior...Ch. 4 - An aluminum heat sink (k=240W/mK), used to cool an...Ch. 4 - Hot water is transported from a cogeneration power...Ch. 4 - A long constantan wire of 1-mm diameter is butt...Ch. 4 - A hole of diameter D=0.25m is drilled through the...Ch. 4 - In Chapter 3 we that, whenever fins are attached...Ch. 4 - An igloo is built in the shape of a hemisphere,...Ch. 4 - Prob. 4.34PCh. 4 - An electronic device, in the form of a disk 20 mm...Ch. 4 - The elemental unit of an air heater consists of a...Ch. 4 - Prob. 4.37PCh. 4 - Prob. 4.38PCh. 4 - Prob. 4.39PCh. 4 - Prob. 4.40PCh. 4 - One of the strengths of numerical methods is their...Ch. 4 - Determine expressionsfor...Ch. 4 - Consider heat transfer in a one-dimensional...Ch. 4 - In a two-dimensional cylindrical configuration,...Ch. 4 - Upper and lower surfaces of a bus bar are...Ch. 4 - Derive the nodal finite-difference equations for...Ch. 4 - Consider the nodal point 0 located on the boundary...Ch. 4 - Prob. 4.48PCh. 4 - Prob. 4.49PCh. 4 - Consider the network for a two-dimensional system...Ch. 4 - An ancient myth describes how a wooden ship was...Ch. 4 - Consider the square channel shown in the sketch...Ch. 4 - A long conducting rod of rectangular cross section...Ch. 4 - A flue passing hot exhaust gases has a square...Ch. 4 - Steady-state temperatures (K) at three nodal...Ch. 4 - Functionally graded materials are intentionally...Ch. 4 - Steady-state temperatures at selected nodal points...Ch. 4 - Consider an aluminum heat sink (k=240W/mK), such...Ch. 4 - Conduction within relatively complex geometries...Ch. 4 - Prob. 4.60PCh. 4 - The steady-state temperatures (°C) associated with...Ch. 4 - A steady-state, finite-difference analysis has...Ch. 4 - Prob. 4.63PCh. 4 - Prob. 4.64PCh. 4 - Consider a two-dimensional. straight triangular...Ch. 4 - A common arrangement for heating a large surface...Ch. 4 - A long, solid cylinder of diameter D=25mm is...Ch. 4 - Consider Problem 4.69. An engineer desires to...Ch. 4 - Prob. 4.71PCh. 4 - Prob. 4.72PCh. 4 - Prob. 4.73PCh. 4 - Refer to the two-dimensional rectangular plate of...Ch. 4 - The shape factor for conduction through the edge...Ch. 4 - Prob. 4.77PCh. 4 - A simplified representation for cooling in very...Ch. 4 - Prob. 4.84PCh. 4 - A long trapezoidal bar is subjected to uniform...Ch. 4 - Consider the system of Problem 4.54. The interior...Ch. 4 - A long furnace. constructed from refractory brick...Ch. 4 - A hot pipe is embedded eccentrically as shown in a...Ch. 4 - A hot liquid flows along a V-groove in a solid...Ch. 4 - Prob. 4S.5PCh. 4 - Hollow prismatic bars fabricated from plain carbon...
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- A square silicon chip 7mm7mm in size and 0.5-mm thick is mounted on a plastic substrate as shown in the sketch below. The top surface of the chip is cooled by a synthetic liquid flowing over it. Electronic circuits on the bottom of the chip generate heat at a rate of 5 W that must be transferred through the chip. Estimate the steady-state temperature difference between the front and back surfaces of the chip. The thermal conductivity of silicon is 150 W/m K. Problem 1.6arrow_forward1.4 To measure thermal conductivity, two similar 1-cm-thick specimens are placed in the apparatus shown in the accompanying sketch. Electric current is supplied to the guard heater, and a wattmeter shows that the power dissipation is 10 W. Thermocouples attached to the warmer and to the cooler surfaces show temperatures of 322 and 300 K, respectively. Calculate the thermal conductivity of the material at the mean temperature in W/m K. Problem 1.4arrow_forward1.1 On a cold winter day, the outer surface of a 0.2-m-thick concrete wall of a warehouse is exposed to temperature of –5°C, while the inner surface is kept at 20°C. The thermal conductivity of the concrete is 1.2 W/m K. Determine the heat loss through the wall, which is 10-m long and 3-m high. Problem 1.1arrow_forward
- 2.3 The shield of a nuclear reactor is idealized by a large 25-cm-thick flat plate having a thermal conductivity of . Radiation from the interior of the reactor penetrates the shield and there produces heat generation that decreases exponentially from a value of at the inner surface to a value of at a distance of 12.5 cm from the interior surface. If the exterior surface is kept at 38°C by forced convection, determine the temperature at the inner surface of the field. Hint: First set up the differential equation for a system in which the heat generation rate varies according to .arrow_forward3.10 A spherical shell satellite (3-m-OD, 1.25-cm-thick stainless steel walls) re-enters the atmosphere from outer space. If its original temperature is 38°C, the effective average temperature of the atmosphere is 1093°C, and the effective heat transfer coefficient is , estimate the temperature of the shell after reentry, assuming the time of reentry is 10 min and the interior of the shell is evacuated.arrow_forwardA section of a composite wall with the dimensions shown below has uniform temperatures of 200C and 50C over the left and right surfaces, respectively. If the thermal conductivities of the wall materials are: kA=70W/mK,kB=60W/mK, kC=40W/mK, and kP=20W/mK, determine the rate of heat transfer through this section of the wall and the temperatures at the interfaces. Repeat Problem 1.34, including a contact resistance of 0.1 K/W at each of the interfaces.arrow_forward
- The heat transfer coefficient for a gas flowing over a thin float plate 3-m long and 0.3-m wide varies with distance from the leading edge according to hc(x)=10x1/4Wm2K If the plate temperature is 170C and the gas temperature is 30C, calculate (a) the average heat transfer coefficient, (b) the rate of heat transfer between the plate and the gas, and (c) the local heat flux 2 m from the leading edge. Problem 1.18arrow_forward2.29 In a cylindrical fuel rod of a nuclear reactor, heat is generated internally according to the equation where = local rate of heat generation per unit volume at r = outside radius = rate of heat generation per unit volume at the centerline Calculate the temperature drop from the centerline to the surface for a 2.5-cm-diameter rod having a thermal conductivity of if the rate of heat removal from its surface is 1.6 .arrow_forward
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