A 30-cm-diameter, 4-m-high cylindrical column of a house made of concrete ( k = 0.79 W/m .K, and α = 5 .94 × 10 -7 m 2 /s, p = 1600 kg/m 3 , and c p = 0 .84 kJ/kg .K) and cooled to 14°C during a cold night is heated again during the day by being exposed to ambient air at an average temperature of 28°C with an average heat transfer coefficient of 14 W/m 2 K. Using the analytical one-term approximation method, determine (a) how long it will take for the column surface temperature to rise to 27°C, (b) the amount of heat transfer until the center temperature reaches to 28°C, and (c) the amount of heat transfer until the surface temperature reaches 27°C.
A 30-cm-diameter, 4-m-high cylindrical column of a house made of concrete ( k = 0.79 W/m .K, and α = 5 .94 × 10 -7 m 2 /s, p = 1600 kg/m 3 , and c p = 0 .84 kJ/kg .K) and cooled to 14°C during a cold night is heated again during the day by being exposed to ambient air at an average temperature of 28°C with an average heat transfer coefficient of 14 W/m 2 K. Using the analytical one-term approximation method, determine (a) how long it will take for the column surface temperature to rise to 27°C, (b) the amount of heat transfer until the center temperature reaches to 28°C, and (c) the amount of heat transfer until the surface temperature reaches 27°C.
A 30-cm-diameter, 4-m-high cylindrical column of a house made of concrete
(
k
=
0.79
W/m
.K, and
α
= 5
.94
×
10
-7
m
2
/s, p = 1600 kg/m
3
, and c
p
= 0
.84 kJ/kg
.K)
and cooled to 14°C during a cold night is heated again during the day by being exposed to ambient air at an average temperature of 28°C with an average heat transfer coefficient of 14 W/m2 K. Using the analytical one-term approximation method, determine (a) how long it will take for the column surface temperature to rise to 27°C, (b) the amount of heat transfer until the center temperature reaches to 28°C, and (c) the amount of heat transfer until the surface temperature reaches 27°C.
Q4/ A compressor is driven motor by mean of a flat belt of thickness 10 mm and a width of
250 mm. The motor pulley is 300 mm diameter and run at 900 rpm and the compressor
pulley is 1500 mm diameter. The shaft center distance is 1.5 m. The angle of contact of
the smaller pulley is 220° and on the larger pulley is 270°. The coefficient of friction
between the belt and the small pulley is 0.3, and between the belt and the large pulley is
0.25. The maximum allowable belt stress is 2 MPa and the belt density is 970 kg/m³.
(a) What is the power capacity of the drive and (b) If the small pulley replaced by
V-grooved pulley of diameter 300 mm, grooved angle of 34° and the coefficient of
friction between belt and grooved pulley is 0.35. What will be the power capacity in this
case, assuming that the diameter of the large pulley remain the same of 1500 mm.
You are tasked with designing a power drive system to transmit power between a motor and a conveyor belt in a manufacturing facility as illustrated in figure.
The design must ensure efficient power transmission, reliability, and safety. Given the following specifications and constraints, design drive system for this application:
Specifications:
Motor Power: The electric motor provides 10 kW of power at 1,500 RPM.
Output Speed: The output shaft should rotate at 150 rpm.
Design Decisions:
Transmission ratio: Determine the necessary drive ratio for the system.
Shaft Diameter: Design the shafts for both the motor and the conveyor end.
Material Selection: Choose appropriate materials for the gears, shafts.
Bearings: Select suitable rolling element bearings.
Constraints:
Space Limitation:
The available space for the gear drive system is limited to a 1-meter-long section.
Attribute 4 of CEP
Depth of knowledge required
Fundamentals-based, first principles analytical approach…
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.
First Law of Thermodynamics, Basic Introduction - Internal Energy, Heat and Work - Chemistry; Author: The Organic Chemistry Tutor;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NyOYW07-L5g;License: Standard youtube license