Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning: Analysis and Design
Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning: Analysis and Design
6th Edition
ISBN: 9781119628798
Author: Faye C. McQuiston; Jerald D. Parker; Jeffrey D. Spitler
Publisher: Wiley Global Education US
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Chapter 5, Problem 5.26P

A heated building is built on a concrete slab with dimensions of 50 × 100 ft ( 15 × 30  m ) . The slab is insulated around the edges with 1.5 in. (40 mm) expanded polystyrene, 2 ft (0.61 m) in width. The outdoor design temperature is 10 F (—12 C). Estimate heat loss from the floor slab.

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you are assigned by your food engineering professor to assist a food manufacturing company as part of your task. On your first day of report, the owner wants to know if their furnace is still in condition, in which the heat loss per square meter should be at least 1,000 W/m2. The details of the furnace are as follows. The furnace wall is 1m by 1m. It is made up of 3 layers, in which the inner wall is made up of fire brick, followed an insulating brick and finally, red brick for the outer layer. You checked the inside surface temperature and got a temperature of 870oC which is 830oC hotter than the outer surface. Other data are provided from the furnace manual and specs. Co-efficient of thermal conduciveness and thickness of the layers are as follows: 1.0 W/m-K, thickness: 22 cm 0.12 W/m-K, thickness: 7.5 cm 0.75 W/m-K, thickness: 11 cm

Chapter 5 Solutions

Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning: Analysis and Design

Ch. 5 - Estimate what fraction of the heat transfer for a...Ch. 5 - Make a table similar to Table 5-4a showing...Ch. 5 - Estimate the unit thermal resistance for a...Ch. 5 - Refer to Problem 5-13, and estimate the unit...Ch. 5 - A ceiling space is formed by a large flat roof and...Ch. 5 - A wall is 20 ft (6.1 m) wide and 8 ft (2.4 m) high...Ch. 5 - Estimate the heat-transfer rate per square foot...Ch. 5 - A wall exactly like the one described in Table...Ch. 5 - Prob. 5.19PCh. 5 - Compute the overall heat-transfer coefficient for...Ch. 5 - Compute the overall heat transfer for a single...Ch. 5 - Determine the overall heattransfer coefficient for...Ch. 5 - A basement is 2020ft(66m) and 7 ft (2.13 m) below...Ch. 5 - Estimate the overall heat-transfer coefficient for...Ch. 5 - Rework Problem 5-23 assuming that the walls are...Ch. 5 - A heated building is built on a concrete slab with...Ch. 5 - A basement wall extends 6 ft (1.8 m) below grade...Ch. 5 - A 2440ft(7.312.2m) building has a full basement...Ch. 5 - The floor of the basement described in Problem...Ch. 5 - Assume that the ground temperature tg is 40 F (10...Ch. 5 - Use the temperatures given in Problem 5-30 and...Ch. 5 - A small office building is constructed with a...Ch. 5 - A 100 ft length of buried, uninsulated steel pipe...Ch. 5 - Estimate the heat loss from 100 m of buried...Ch. 5 - A large beverage cooler resembles a small building...Ch. 5 - Consider the wall section shown in Fig. 5-10. (a)...Ch. 5 - A building has floor plan dimensions of 3060ft....Ch. 5 - Compute the temperature of the metal roof deck of...Ch. 5 - Consider the wall section shown in Fig. -4a,...Ch. 5 - Consider the knee space shown in Fig. 5-11. The...Ch. 5 - Estimate the temperature in an unheated basement...
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