Concept explainers
In Betty Crocker ‘s Cookbook, it is stated that it takes 2 h 45 mm to roast a 3.2-kg rib initially at 4.5°C to “rare” in an oven maintained at 163°C. It is recommended that a meat thermometer be used to monitor the cooking, and the rib is considered rare when the thermometer inserted into the center of the thickest part of the meat registers 60°C. The rib can be treated as a homogeneous spherical object with the properties
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Heat and Mass Transfer: Fundamentals and Applications
- The author and his then 6-year-old son have conducted the following experiment to determine the thermal conductivity of a hot dog. They first boiled water in a large pan and measured the temperature of the boiling water to be 94°C, which is not surprising, since they live at an elevation of about 1650 m in Reno, Nevada. They then took a hot dog that is 12.5 cm long and 2.2 cm in diameter and inserted a thermocouple into the midpoint of the hot dog and another thermocouple just under the skin. They waited until both thermocouples read 20°C, which is the ambient temperature. They then dropped the hot dog into boiling water and observed the changes in both temperatures. Exactly 2 min after the hot dog was dropped into the boiling water, they recorded the center and the surface temperatures to be 59°C and 88°C, respectively. The density of the hot dog can be taken to be 980 kg/m3, which is slightly less than the density of water, since the hot dog was observed to be floating in water while…arrow_forwardConsider a very long, solid rod of 2.5-cm diameter where a portion is inserted in a furnace while the rest of the length is exposed to air at 27°C, resembling a fin. After steady state had been reached, a thermocouple was used to measure the temperatures at the base of the fin and at a point that is 7.6 cm from the base. The temperatures were found to be 126°C and 91°C, respectively. The heat transfer coefficient over the surface of the rod exposed to the air was estimated to be 22.7 W/m²·K. a) What is the thermal conductivity of the rod? Can this be deemed an effective fin? b) If the fin was cut at 10 cm from the base, making the new fin tip exposed to the air, what is the fin heat transfer rate and the fin efficiency? Assume the temperature at the base and other properties are maintained, including the thermal conductivity of the rod solved in (a)arrow_forwardA father and son conducted the following simple experiment on a hot dog which measured 12.5 cm in length and 2.2 cm in diameter. They inserted one food thermometer into the midpoint of the hot dog and another one was placed just under the skin of the hot dog. The temperatures of the thermometers were monitored until both thermometers read 20°C, which is the ambient temperature. The hot dog was then placed in 94°C boiling water and after exactly 2 min they recorded the center temperature and the skin temperature of the hot dog to be 59°C and 88°C, respectively. Assuming the following properties for the hot dog: r = 980 kg/m3 and cp = 3900 J/kg·K and using transient temperature charts, determine (a) the thermal diffusivity of the hot dog, (b) the thermal conductivity of the hot dog, and (c) the convection heat transfer coefficient.arrow_forward
- 16-26 In a certain experiment, cylindrical samples of diameter 4 cm and length 7 cm are used (see Fig. 16–9). The two thermocouples in each sample are placed 3 cm apart. After initial transients, the electric heater is observed to draw 0.6 A at 110 V, and both differential thermometers read a temperature difference of 8°C. Determine the thermal con- ductivity of the sample. Answer: 98.5 W/m.Karrow_forwardA food product with 82% moisture content is being frozen. Estimate the specific heat of the product at -8°C when 82% of the water is in a frozen state. The specific heat of dry product solid is 2.5 kJ/(kg °C). Assume specific heat of water at -10°C is similar to specific heat of water at 0°C.arrow_forwardMeasuring the temperature of very cold substances can be challenging. Here is one way of measuring the temperature of liquid nitrogen. A 50g flake of aluminum is submerged in liquid nitrogen and left immersed until it is in thermal equilibrium. The flake is then removed and placed in a well-insulated container with 500ml of water at 30°C. When water and flake attain thermal equilibrium, the temperature of the water is found to be 25°C. What was the temperature of the liquid nitrogen?arrow_forward
- Indirect Cooling With Liquid Nitrogen. You are designing a system to cool an insulated silver plate of dimensions 2.00 cm × 2.00 cm x 0.40 cm. One end of a thermally insulated copper wire (diameter D = 2.70 mm and length L = 12.0 cm) is dipped into a vat of liquid nitrogen (T = 77.2 K), and the other end is attached to the bottom of the silver plate. (a) If the silver plate starts at room temperature (73.0°F), what is the initial rate of heat flow between the plate and the liquid nitrogen reservoir? (b) Assuming the rate of heat flow calculated in part (a), estimate the temperature of the silver plate after 30.0 seconds.arrow_forwardIn a certain industrial process, it is known that the temperature of one of its stages varies between 10°C and 50°C. The measuring instrument used to measure this temperature has its measurement range from -50°C to 50°C, with a dead zone of 1%. In view of the above, it is stated that the measuring instrument (A) will not show temperature variations lower than or equal to 0.5 °C. (B) will not show temperature variations lower than or equal to 1 °C. (C) is not suitable for the measurement for which it is used, since it may present distortions in the measurement of the temperature if it is between 49 C and 50 C. (D) measures, although not reliably accurate,temperatures ranging up to 0.5° C beyond its range of nominal measure. (E) measures, although unreliable in accuracy, tem- temperatures ranging up to 1° C beyond their rating range nominal measure.arrow_forwardOn a 5 day wilderness expedition you'll need to heat 3.0kg of water to the boiling point each day. The air temperature will average 25°C. You have available canisters of compressed propane C3H8 fuel, which you'll burn to heat the water. Each canister has 100.g of propane in it. What is the minimum number of fuel canisters you must bring? The standard heat of formation of propane at 25°C is −103.85/kJmol.arrow_forward
- Differential Equation APPLICATIONS OF FIRST ORDER DIFFERENTIAL Newton’s Law of Cooling and Joint Proportions A hot pie is just taken out from an oven with a set temperature of 175°F. It is placed near a window with an ambient temperature of 20°C. After 3minutes, the temperature of the pie is 150°F, determine how long it will take the pie have a temperature of 100°F. Determine also the time when the temperature of the pie is half a degree above the ambient temperature.arrow_forwardDetermine the heat absorbed, when 1 mol of carbon monoxide gas is heated from 212.4 K to 437.2 K. The relationship for the heat capacity at constant pressure in J mol-1 K-1 is Cp = a + bT + cT2, with a = 25, b = 7.0 x 10^-3, and c = -8 x 10^-7arrow_forwardA chromel–constantan thermocouple measuring the temperature of a fluid is connected by mistake with copper–constantan extension leads (such that the two constantan wires are connected together and the copper extension lead wire is connected to the chromel thermocouple wire). If the fluid temperature was actually 250 C and the junction between the thermocouple and extension leads was at 90 C, what e.m.f. would be measured at the open ends of the extension leads if the reference junction is maintained at 0 C? What fluid temperature would be deduced from this (assuming that the connection error was not known)?arrow_forward
- Principles of Heat Transfer (Activate Learning wi...Mechanical EngineeringISBN:9781305387102Author:Kreith, Frank; Manglik, Raj M.Publisher:Cengage Learning