Introduction to Heat Transfer
6th Edition
ISBN: 9780470501962
Author: Frank P. Incropera, David P. DeWitt, Theodore L. Bergman, Adrienne S. Lavine
Publisher: Wiley, John & Sons, Incorporated
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Question
Chapter 3, Problem 3.92P
To determine
The wall temperature.
The plot in the given temperature limits.
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
A glass vessel with an insulating cover with a surface area of (Z + 100) cm² and (Z + 15)
mm thick is filled with ice at 0° C and placed in a second vessel maintained at a temperature
of 100° C. Find the mass of the ice that melts per minute when the flow of heat becomes
steady. Latent heat of ice = 3.3 x 105 J/kg and K for glass = 1.0 W /mK.
%3!
A steel ball of density 7800 kg/m³ and specific
heat 0.47 kJ/kg-K having 10 cm diameter at
300°C is placed in atmosphere at 30°C. Calculate
the initial rate of cooling in °C/sec. Assume
convective heat transfer coefficient h = 15W / (m
^ 2) - K . Neglect heat loss by radiation.
The initial temperature of a 50 cm long silver wire is 50 °C. The circumference of the wire in question is completely insulated, but both ends are kept at a temperature of 0 °C (zero degrees Celsius). Obtain the heat conduction along the wire as a function of time and position and, taking a single term in the solution, determine how many degrees Celsius the temperature in the middle of the rod will be after 7 minutes. (For silver wire, α=1.70 cm2/s.)
Chapter 3 Solutions
Introduction to Heat Transfer
Ch. 3 - Consider the plane wall of Figure 3.1, separating...Ch. 3 - A new building to be located in a cold climate is...Ch. 3 - The rear window of an automobile is defogged by...Ch. 3 - The rear window of an automobile is defogged by...Ch. 3 - A dormitory at a large university, built 50 years...Ch. 3 - In a manufacturing process, a transparent film is...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.7PCh. 3 - A t=10-mm-thick horizontal layer of water has a...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.9PCh. 3 - The wind chill, which is experienced on a cold,...
Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.11PCh. 3 - A thermopane window consists of two pieces of...Ch. 3 - A house has a composite wall of wood, fiberglass...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.14PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.15PCh. 3 - Work Problem 3.15 assuming surfaces parallel to...Ch. 3 - Consider the oven of Problem 1.54. The walls of...Ch. 3 - The composite wall of an oven consists of three...Ch. 3 - The wall of a drying oven is constructed by...Ch. 3 - The t=4-mm-thick glass windows of an...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.21PCh. 3 - In the design of buildings, energy conservation...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.23PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.24PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.25PCh. 3 - A composite wall separates combustion gases at...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.27PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.28PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.29PCh. 3 - The performance of gas turbine engines may...Ch. 3 - A commercial grade cubical freezer, 3 m on a...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.32PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.33PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.34PCh. 3 - A batt of glass fiber insulation is of density...Ch. 3 - Air usually constitutes up to half of the volume...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.37PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.38PCh. 3 - The diagram shows a conical section fabricatedfrom...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.40PCh. 3 - From Figure 2.5 it is evident that, over a wide...Ch. 3 - Consider a tube wall of inner and outer radii ri...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.43PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.44PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.45PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.46PCh. 3 - To maximize production and minimize pumping...Ch. 3 - A thin electrical heater is wrapped around the...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.50PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.51PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.52PCh. 3 - A wire of diameter D=2mm and uniform temperatureT...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.54PCh. 3 - Electric current flows through a long rod...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.56PCh. 3 - A long, highly polished aluminum rod of diameter...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.58PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.59PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.60PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.61PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.62PCh. 3 - Consider the series solution, Equation 5.42, for...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.64PCh. 3 - Copper-coated, epoxy-filled fiberglass circuit...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.66PCh. 3 - A constant-property, one-dimensional Plane slab of...Ch. 3 - Referring to the semiconductor processing tool of...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.69PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.70PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.71PCh. 3 - The 150-mm-thick wall of a gas-fired furnace is...Ch. 3 - Steel is sequentially heated and cooled (annealed)...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.74PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.75PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.76PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.77PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.78PCh. 3 - The strength and stability of tires may be...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.80PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.81PCh. 3 - A long rod of 60-mm diameter and thermophysical...Ch. 3 - A long cylinder of 30-min diameter, initially at a...Ch. 3 - Work Problem 5.47 for a cylinder of radius r0 and...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.85PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.86PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.87PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.88PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.89PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.90PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.91PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.92PCh. 3 - In Section 5.2 we noted that the value of the Biot...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.94PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.95PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.96PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.97PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.98PCh. 3 - Work Problem 5.47 for the case of a sphere of...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.100PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.101PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.102PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.103PCh. 3 - Consider the plane wall of thickness 2L, the...Ch. 3 - Problem 4.9 addressed radioactive wastes stored...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.106PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.107PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.108PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.109PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.110PCh. 3 - A one-dimensional slab of thickness 2L is...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.112PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.113PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.114PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.115PCh. 3 - Derive the transient, two-dimensional...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.117PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.118PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.119PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.120PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.121PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.122PCh. 3 - Consider two plates, A and B, that are each...Ch. 3 - Consider the fuel element of Example 5.11, which...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.125PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.126PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.127PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.128PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.129PCh. 3 - Consider the thick slab of copper in Example 5.12,...Ch. 3 - In Section 5.5, the one-term approximation to the...Ch. 3 - Thermal energy storage systems commonly involve a...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.133PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.134PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.135PCh. 3 - A tantalum rod of diameter 3 mm and length 120 mm...Ch. 3 - A support rod k=15W/mK,=4.0106m2/s of diameter...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.138PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.139PCh. 3 - A thin circular disk is subjected to induction...Ch. 3 - An electrical cable, experiencing uniform...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.142PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.145PCh. 3 - Consider the fuel element of Example 5.11, which...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.147PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.148PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.149PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.150PCh. 3 - In a manufacturing process, stainless steel...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.153PCh. 3 - Carbon steel (AISI 1010) shafts of 0.1-m diameter...Ch. 3 - A thermal energy storage unit consists of a large...Ch. 3 - Small spherical particles of diameter D=50m...Ch. 3 - A spherical vessel used as a reactor for producing...Ch. 3 - Batch processes are often used in chemical and...Ch. 3 - Consider a thin electrical heater attached to a...Ch. 3 - An electronic device, such as a power transistor...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.161PCh. 3 - In a material processing experiment conducted...Ch. 3 - Prob. 3.165PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.166PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.167PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.168PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.173PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.174PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.175PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.176PCh. 3 - Prob. 3.177P
Knowledge Booster
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, mechanical-engineering and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- Q5Two large containers A and B of the same size are filled with different fluids. The fluids in containers A and B are maintainedat 0° C and 100° C, respectively. A small metal bar, whose initial temperature is 100° C, is lowered into container A. After1 minute the temperature of the bar is 90° C. After 2 minutes the bar is removed and instantly transferred to the othercontainer. After 1 minute in container B, the temperature of the bar rises 10°. How long, measured from the start of theentire process, will it take the bar to reach 99.9° C?arrow_forwardA long rod with a thermal conductivity of 1 W / m · K is subjected to the boundary conditions given in the figure. Find the temperature distribution in the steady state with the energy balance method for ∆x = ∆y = 0.2m. Also calculate the heat transfer between rod and fluid per unit length.arrow_forward= Consider a large plane wall of thickness L=0.3 m, thermal conductivity k = 2.5 W/m.K, and surface area A = 12 m². The left side of the wall at x=0 is subjected to a net heat flux of ɖo = 700 W/m² while the temperature at that surface is measured to be T₁ = 80°C. Assuming constant thermal conductivity and no heat generation in the wall, (a) express the differential equation and the boundary equations for steady one- dimensional heat conduction through the wall, (b) obtain a relation for the variation of the temperature in the wall by solving the differential equation, and (c) evaluate the temperature of the right surface of the wall at x=L. Ti до L Xarrow_forward
- A brass wire of 0.8 mm in diameter and 12 m long is annealed in an annealing furnace at a temperature of 400°C. Find the time required for the wire to reach the temperature of 150°C if the temperature of the wire before placing it inside the furnace is 30°C. Take h = 35 W/m2 K. Density = 8500 kg/m3. Specific heat = 0.335 kJ/kg K.arrow_forwardExample 10: Consider a long resistance wire of radius r1 = 0.2 cm and thermal conductivity kwire = 15 W/m·°C in which heat is generated uniformly as a result of resistance heating at a constant rate of g = 50 W/cm3. The wire is embedded in a 0.5-cm-thick layer of ceramic whose thermal conductivity is kceramic = 1.2 W/m·°C. If the outer surface temperature of the ceramic layer is measured to be Ts = 45°C, determine the temperatures at the center of the resistance wire and the interface of the wire and the ceramic layer under steady conditions.arrow_forward19 mm diameter steel balls are quenched by heating to 989 K followed by slow cooling to 400 K in an environment with air at T∞ = 325 K and h = 39 W/m2.K. Assuming that the steel properties are k = 40 W/m.K, ρ = 7800 kg/m3 and C = 600 J/kg.K, estimate the time (in "minutes") required for the cooling process. Bolas de aço com 19 mm de diâmetro são temperadas pelo aquecimento a 989 K seguido pelo resfriamento lento até 400 K em um ambiente com ar a T∞ = 325 K e h = 39 W/m2.K. Admitindo que as propriedades do aço sejam k = 40 W/m.K, ρ = 7800 kg/m3 e C = 600 J/kg.K, estime o tempo (em "minutos") necessário para o processo de resfriamento.arrow_forward
- Determine the time needed to decrease the temperature of a solid cylinder from 40 C to 35 C if the ambient temperature is equal to 31 C. The cylinder has a length equals to 0.9 m and diameter equals to 100 mm. The heat convective coefficient is equal to 1.3 W/m^2.K. The cylinder has a conductivity equals to 2 W/m.K, a density equals to 1200 kg/m^3 and its Cp is equal to 4.700 kJ/kgK. Select one: a. 83325 s O b. 10500s O c. 45360 s O d. 30050 sarrow_forwardQ1/ Consider a large plane wall of thickness L=0.03 m. The wall surface at x =0 is insulated, while the surface at x =L is maintained at a temperature of 30°C. The thermal conductivity of the wall is k=25 W/m °C, and heat is generated in the wall at a rate of g = 9oe0.5x/L W/m³ Where g, = 8 x 10 W /m². Assuming steady one-dimensional heat transfer, (a) express the differential equation and the boundary conditions for heat conduction through the wall, (b) obtain a relation for the variation of temperature in the wall by solving the differential equation, and (c) determine the temperature of the insulated surface of the wall.arrow_forwardDetermine the time needed to decrease the temperature of a solid cylinder from 40 C to 35 C if the ambient temperature is equal to 31 C. The cylinder has a length equals to 0.9 m and diameter equals to 100 mm. The heat convective coefficient is equal to 9 W/m^2.K. The cylinder has a conductivity equals to 2 W/m.K, a density equals to 1200 kg/m^3 and its Cp is equal to 4.700 kJ/kgK.arrow_forward
- Steel cubes 10 mm in width are annealed by heating to 1,377 K and then slowly cooling to 469 K in an air environment for which T∞ = 301 K and h = 24 W/m2-K. Assuming the properties of the steel to be k = 24 W/m · K, ρ = 7,047 kg/m3, and c = 916 J/kg · K, estimate the time required for the cooling process.arrow_forwardA solid hemisphere of radius 5 cm to be cooled in air (at 20 o C, h=10 W/m 2 .K) from 200 oC to center of 150 oC, assume following sphere properties ρ=8500kg/m3, k=20W/m.K , C=400 J/kg.Ka. List assumptions and justify selected method of solution b. How long does it take to cool the hemisphere? c. What is the temperature of the surface at end of cooling?arrow_forwardTake time but solve full handwriting okarrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Elements Of ElectromagneticsMechanical EngineeringISBN:9780190698614Author:Sadiku, Matthew N. O.Publisher:Oxford University PressMechanics of Materials (10th Edition)Mechanical EngineeringISBN:9780134319650Author:Russell C. HibbelerPublisher:PEARSONThermodynamics: An Engineering ApproachMechanical EngineeringISBN:9781259822674Author:Yunus A. Cengel Dr., Michael A. BolesPublisher:McGraw-Hill Education
- Control Systems EngineeringMechanical EngineeringISBN:9781118170519Author:Norman S. NisePublisher:WILEYMechanics of Materials (MindTap Course List)Mechanical EngineeringISBN:9781337093347Author:Barry J. Goodno, James M. GerePublisher:Cengage LearningEngineering Mechanics: StaticsMechanical EngineeringISBN:9781118807330Author:James L. Meriam, L. G. Kraige, J. N. BoltonPublisher:WILEY
Elements Of Electromagnetics
Mechanical Engineering
ISBN:9780190698614
Author:Sadiku, Matthew N. O.
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Mechanics of Materials (10th Edition)
Mechanical Engineering
ISBN:9780134319650
Author:Russell C. Hibbeler
Publisher:PEARSON
Thermodynamics: An Engineering Approach
Mechanical Engineering
ISBN:9781259822674
Author:Yunus A. Cengel Dr., Michael A. Boles
Publisher:McGraw-Hill Education
Control Systems Engineering
Mechanical Engineering
ISBN:9781118170519
Author:Norman S. Nise
Publisher:WILEY
Mechanics of Materials (MindTap Course List)
Mechanical Engineering
ISBN:9781337093347
Author:Barry J. Goodno, James M. Gere
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Engineering Mechanics: Statics
Mechanical Engineering
ISBN:9781118807330
Author:James L. Meriam, L. G. Kraige, J. N. Bolton
Publisher:WILEY
Heat Transfer – Conduction, Convection and Radiation; Author: NG Science;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Me60Ti0E_rY;License: Standard youtube license