Water at 300 K and a flow rate of
(a) Write an expression for the linearized radiation coefficient corresponding to radiation exchange between the outer surface of the pipe and the furnace walls. Explain how to calculate this coefficient if the surface temperature of the tube is represented by the arithmetic mean of its inlet and outlet values.
(b) Determine the outlet temperature of the water,
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Fundamentals of Heat and Mass Transfer
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- Determine the rate of heat transfer per meter length to a light oil flowing through a 2.5-cm-ID, 60-cm-long copper tube at a velocity of 0.03 m/s. The oil enters the tube at 16C, and the tube is heated by steam condensing on its outer surface at atmospheric pressure with a heat transfer coefficient of 11.3 kW/m K. The properties of the oil at various temperatures are listed in the following table: Temperature, T(C) 15 30 40 65 100 (kg/m3) 912 912 896 880 864 c(kJ/kgK) 1.80 1.84 1.925 2.0 2.135 k(W/mK) 0.133 0.133 0.131 0.129 0.128 (kg/ms) 0.089 0.0414 0.023 0.00786 0.0033 Pr 1204 573 338 122 55arrow_forward1.67 In beauty salons and in homes, a ubiquitous device is the hairdryer. The front end of a typical hairdryer is idealized as a thin-walled cylindrical duct with a 6-cm diameter with a fan at the inlet that blows air over an electric heating coil as schematically shown in the figure. The design of this appliance requires two power settings, with which the air blown over the electric heating coil is heated from the ambient temperature of to an outlet temperature of and with exit air velocities of 1.0 m/s and 1.5 m/s. Estimate the electric power required for the heating coil to meet these conditions, assuming that heat loss from the outside of the dryer duct is neglected.arrow_forwardA pipe 30 m long with an outer diameter of 75 mm is used to deliver steam at a rate of 1500 kg / hour. The vapor pressure is 198.53 kPa entering the pipe with a quality of 98%. The pipe needs to be insulated with a thermal conductivity of 0.2 W / (m K) so that the quality of the steam will only slightly decrease to 95%. The outer surface temperature of the insulation is assumed to be 25 ° C. Ignore resistance conductive of the pipe material and it is assumed that there is no pressure drop in the pipe. a. Determine the enthalpy of incoming vapor = Answer kJ / kg. b. Determine the enthalpy of steam coming out = Answer kJ / kg. c. Determine the vapor heat change / loss along the flow = Answer watt. d. Specify the minimum required insulation thickness = Answer cm.arrow_forward
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- 1. The operations of the industrial management plant where you work asks you to determine the length of a 2.0 cm diameter pipe that will be used to heat water from an inlet temperature of 20.0°C to an outlet temperature of 60.0 °C The operational flow of water in the pipe is to be 0.6 m/s, and the surface temperature of the wall is to be kept constant at 90.0°C by condensing steam. For the development of this task, you must obtain the properties of water at the average temperature of the fluid. To determine the forced convection heat transfer coefficient use the correlation: Nu = 0.023Re0.8p₁.0.4arrow_forwardA hot liquid (cp = 1000 J/kg∙K) flows at a flow rate of 0.05 kg/s inside a copper pipe with an inner diameter of 45 mm and a wall thickness of 5 mm. At the pipe exit, the liquid temperature decreases by 10°C from its temperature at the inlet. The outer surface of the 5-m-long copper pipe is black oxidized, which subjects the outer surface to radiation heat transfer. The air temperature surrounding the pipe is 10°C. Assuming that the properties of air can be evaluated at 35°C and 1 atm pressure, determine the outer surface temperature of the pipe. Is 35°C an appropriate film temperature for evaluation of the air properties?arrow_forward2. Atmospheric air at a temperature of 120°C enters a pipe with an inside diameter of 7cm at a flow rate of 0.22m/s. Assuming that the wall of the pipe is maintained at a constant temperature of 20°C and the exit air must be cooled to 80°C, determine (a) velocity of the air inside the pipe (in m/s) and (b) the convective heat transfer coefficient (in W/m: °K)arrow_forward
- earrow_forwardAir is flowing through a 20 m long pipe of 20 cm diameter at a rate of 0.8 kg/s. The inlet air temperature is 40 deg C; the entire pipe wall is held at a constant temperature of 90 deg C. Estimate the air temperature at the outlet as well as the heat transfer rate for the entire length of the pipe. Properties are: 1.038 kg/m3; 1009 J/(kg-K); 2.042E-05 Pa-s; 0.0293 W/(m-K).arrow_forwardA pipe 30 m long with an outer diameter of 75 mm is used to deliver steam at a rate of 1500 kg / hour. The steam pressure is 198.53 kPa entering the pipe with a quality of 98%. The pipe that needs to be insulated with a thermal conductivity of 0.2 W / (m K) so that the quality of the steam only decreases slightly to 95%. The temperature of the outer surface of the insulation is assumed to be 25 ° C. The conductive of the pipe material and the situation of no pressure drop in the pipe. A. Determine the enthalpy of incoming vapor = Answer kJ / kg. b. Determine the enthalpy of steam that comes out = Answer kJ / kg. c. Determine the change / loss of steam heat along the flow = Answer watt. d. Determine the minimum required insulation thickness = Answer cm.arrow_forward
- Principles of Heat Transfer (Activate Learning wi...Mechanical EngineeringISBN:9781305387102Author:Kreith, Frank; Manglik, Raj M.Publisher:Cengage Learning