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Question: Air at 20°C with a convection


Air at 20°C with a convection heat transfer coefficient of 20 W/m2⋅K blows over a pond. The surface temperature of the pond is at 40°C. Determine the heat flux between the surface of the pond and the air.


> An engine block with a surface area measured to be 0.95 m2 generates a power output of 50 kW with a net engine efficiency of 35 percent. The engine block operates inside a compartment at 157°C, and the average convection heat transfer coefficient is 50

> It is well known that wind makes the cold air feel much colder as a result of the wind-chill effect that is due to an increase in the convection heat transfer coefficient with increasing air velocity. The wind-chill effect is usually expressed in terms o

> Write down the expressions for the physical laws that govern each mode of heat transfer, and identify the variables involved in each relation.

> A 40-cm-long, 800-W electric resistance heating element with diameter 0.5 cm and surface temperature 120°C is immersed in 75 kg of water initially at 20°C. Determine how long it will take for this heater to raise the water temperature to 80°C. Also, dete

> A 0.3-cm-thick, 12-cm-high, and 18-cm-long circuit board houses 80 closely spaced logic chips on one side, each dissipating 0.06 W. The board is impregnated with copper fillings and has an effective thermal conductivity of 16 W/m·K. All the heat generate

> The heat generated in the circuitry on the surface of a silicon chip (k = 130 W/m⋅K) is conducted to the ceramic substrate to which it is attached. The chip is 6 mm × 6 mm in size and 0.5 mm thick and dissipates 3 W of powe

> A cylindrical resistor element on a circuit board dissipates 0.8 W of power. The resistor is 2 cm long and has a diameter of 0.4 cm. Assuming heat to be transferred uniformly from all surfaces, determine (a) the amount of heat this resistor dissipates du

> Can the combined turbine–generator efficiency be greater than either the turbine efficiency or the generator efficiency? Explain.

> The inner and outer surfaces of a 25-cm-thick wall in summer are at 27°C and 44°C, respectively. The outer surface of the wall exchanges heat by radiation with surrounding surfaces at 40°Cand by convection with ambient ai

> The roof of a house consists of a 15-cm-thick concrete slab (k = 2 W/m⋅K) that is 15 m wide and 20 m long. The emissivity of the outer surface of the roof is 0.9, and the convection heat transfer coefficient on that surface is estimated to be 15 W/m2⋅K.

> An AISI 304 stainless steel sheet is going through an annealing process inside an electrically heated oven. The ambient air inside the oven is 600°C, while the surrounding surfaces of the oven are at a uniform temperature of 750°C. If the emissivity of t

> Consider a flat-plate solar collector placed horizontally on the flat roof of a house. The collector is 5 ft wide and 15 ft long, and the average temperature of the exposed surface of the collector is 100°F. The emissivity of the exposed surfa

> A flat-plate solar collector is used to heat water by having water flow through tubes attached at the back of the thin solar absorber plate. The absorber plate has a surface area of 2 m2 with emissivity and absorptivity of 0.9. The surface temperature o

> Solar radiation is incident on a 5-m2 solar absorber plate surface at a rate of 800 W/m2. Ninety three percent of the solar radiation is absorbed by the absorber plate, while the remaining 7 percent is reflected away. The solar absorber plate has a surfa

> What are the mechanisms of heat transfer? How are they distinguished from each other?

> In the metal processing industry, heat treatment of metals is commonly done using electrically heated draw batch furnaces. Consider a furnace that is situated in a room with surrounding air temperature of 30°C and an average convection heat tr

> A 3-m-internal-diameter spherical tank made of 1-cm thick stainless steel is used to store iced water at 0°C. The tank is located outdoors at 25°C. Assuming the entire steel tank to be at 0°C and thus the thermal resistance of the tank to be negligible,

> A 1000-W iron is left on an ironing board with its base exposed to the air at 20°C. The convection heat transfer coefficient between the base surface and the surrounding air is 35 W/m2⋅K. If the base has an emissivity of 0.6

> What is mechanical energy? How does it differ from thermal energy? What are the forms of mechanical energy of a fluid stream?

> A 2-in-diameter spherical ball whose surface is maintained at a temperature of 170°F is suspended in the middle of a room at 70°F. If the convection heat transfer coefficient is 15 Btu/h⋅ft2⋅°F and the emissivity of the surface is 0.8, determine the tota

> Consider a person standing in a room at 23°C. Determine the total rate of heat transfer from this person if the exposed surface area and the skin temperature of the person are 1.7 m2 and 32°C, respectively, and the convection heat transfer coefficient is

> Consider steady heat transfer between two large parallel plates at constant temperatures of T1 = 290 K and T2 = 150 K that are L = 2 cm apart. Assuming the surfaces to be black (emissivity ε = 1), determine the rate of heat transfer between the plates pe

> An electronic package with a surface area of 1 m2 placed in an orbiting space station is exposed to space. The electronics in this package dissipate all 1 kW of its power to the space through its exposed surface. The exposed surface has an emissivity of

> Air at 20°C with a convection heat transfer coefficient of 25 W/m2⋅K blows over a horizontal steel hot plate (k = 43W/m⋅K). The surface area of the plate is 0.38 m2 with a thickness of 2 cm. The plate surfac

> A solid plate, with a thickness of 15 cm and a thermal conductivity of 80 W/m⋅K, is being cooled at the upper surface by air. The air temperature is 10°C, while the temperatures at the upper and lower surfaces of the plate ar

> Consider a 20-cm-thick granite wall with a thermal conductivity of 2.79 W/m⋅K. The temperature of the left surface is held constant at 50°C, whereas the right face is exposed to a flow of 22°C air with a convection

> Why do we characterize the heat conduction ability of insulators in terms of their apparent thermal conductivity instead of their ordinary thermal conductivity?

> We often turn the fan on in summer to help us cool. Explain how a fan makes us feel cooler in the summer. Also explain why some people use ceiling fans also in winter.

> The deep human body temperature of a healthy person remains constant at 37°C while the temperature and the humidity of the environment change with time. Discuss the heat transfer mechanisms between the human body and the environment in both summer and wi

> How is the combined pump–motor efficiency of a pump and motor system defined? Can the combined pump–motor efficiency be greater than either the pump or the motor efficiency?

> Can a medium involve (a) conduction and convection, (b) conduction and radiation, or (c) convection and radiation simultaneously? Give examples for the “yes” answers.

> Can all three modes of heat transfer occur simultaneously (in parallel) in a medium?

> An electronic package in the shape of a sphere with an outer diameter of 100 mm is placed in a large laboratory room. The surface emissivity of the package can assume three different values (0.2, 0.25, and 0.3). The walls of the room are maintained at a

> A spherical interplanetary probe with a diameter of 2 m is sent out into the solar system. The probe surface is made of material having an emissivity of 0.9 and an absorptivity of 0.1. Signals from the sensors monitoring the probe surface temperatures ar

> Two surfaces, one highly polished and the other heavily oxidized, are found to be emitting the same amount of energy per unit area. The highly polished surface has an emissivity of 0.1 at 1070°C, while the emissivity of the heavily oxidized surface is 0.

> Consider a sealed 20-cm-high electronic box whose base dimensions are 40 cm × 40 cm placed in a vacuum chamber. The emissivity of the outer surface of the box is 0.95. If the electronic components in the box dissipate a total of 100 W of pow

> Consider a person whose exposed surface area is 1.7 m2, emissivity is 0.5, and surface temperature is 32°C. Determine the rate of heat loss from that person by radiation in a large room having walls at a temperature of (a) 300 K and (b) 280 K.

> The outer surface of a spacecraft in space has an emissivity of 0.8 and a solar absorptivity of 0.3. If solar radiation is incident on the spacecraft at a rate of 950 W/m2, determine the surface temperature of the spacecraft when the radiation emitted eq

> Why is the thermal conductivity of superinsulation orders of magnitude lower than the thermal conductivity of ordinary insulation?

> Using the conversion factors between W and Btu/h, m and ft, and K and R, express the Stefan–Boltzmann constant σ = 5.67 × 10−8 W/m2⋅K4 in the English unit Btu/h⋅ft2⋅R4.

> What is mechanical efficiency? What does a mechanical efficiency of 100 percent mean for a hydraulic turbine?

> A 3-kg plastic tank that has a volume of 0.2 m3 is filled with liquid water. Assuming the density of water is 1000 kg/m3, determine the weight of the combined system.

> Reconsider Prob. 16–37. Using appropriate software, plot the convection heat transfer coefficient as a function of the wire surface temperature in the range of 100°C to 300°C. Discuss the results. Data from Prob.

> A 1.4-m-long, 0.2-cm-diameter electrical wire extends across a room that is maintained at 20°C. Heat is generated in the wire as a result of resistance heating, and the surface temperature of the wire is measured to be 240°C in stea

> The boiling temperature of nitrogen at atmospheric pressure at sea level (1 atm) is −196°C. Therefore, nitrogen is commonly used in low-temperature scientific studies since the temperature of liquid nitrogen in a tank open to

> A 200-ft-long section of a steam pipe whose outer diameter is 4 in passes through an open space at 50°F. The average temperature of the outer surface of the pipe is measured to be 280°F, and the average heat transfer coefficient on that surface is determ

> A transistor with a height of 0.4 cm and a diameter of 0.6 cm is mounted on a circuit board. The transistor is cooled by air flowing over it with an average heat transfer coefficient of 30 W/m2â‹…K. If the air temperature is 55Â&deg

> An electric current of 5 A passing through a resistor has a measured voltage of 6 V across the resistor. The resistor is cylindrical with a diameter of 2.5 cm and length of 15 cm. The resistor has a uniform temperature of 90°C, and the room air temperatu

> In a power plant, pipes transporting superheated vapor are very common. Superheated vapor is flowing at a rate of 0.3 kg/s inside a pipe 5 cm in diameter and 10 m in length. The pipe is located in a power plant at 20°C and has a uniform surfac

> An engineer who is working on the heat transfer analysis of a house in English units needs the convection heat transfer coefficient on the outer surface of the house. But the only value he can find from his handbooks is 14 W/m2⋅K, which is in SI units. T

> How do the thermal conductivity of gases and liquids vary with temperature?

> One way to improve the fuel efficiency of a car is to use tires that have a lower rolling resistance tires that roll with less resistance. Highway tests at 65 mph showed that tires with the lowest rolling resistance can improve fuel efficiency by nearly

> Reconsider Prob. 16–28. Using appropriate software, plot the rate at which ice melts as a function of the container thickness in the range of 0.1 cm to 1.0 cm. Discuss the results. Data from Prob. 16-28: A hollow spherical iron contain

> A hollow spherical iron container with outer diameter 20 cm and thickness 0.2 cm is filled with iced water at 0°C. If the outer surface temperature is 5°C, determine the approximate rate of heat gain by the iced water in kW and the

> A concrete wall with a surface area of 20 m2 and a thickness of 0.30 m separates conditioned room air from ambient air. The temperature of the inner surface of the wall (T1) is maintained at 25°C. (a) Determine the heat loss Q(W) through the concrete wal

> One way of measuring the thermal conductivity of a material is to sandwich an electric thermofoil heater between two identical rectangular samples of the material and to heavily insulate the four outer edges. Thermocouples attached to the inner and outer

> In a certain experiment, cylindrical samples of diameter 4 cm and length 7 cm are used. 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 th

> The north wall of an electrically heated home is 20 ft long, 10 ft high, and 1 ft thick and is made of brick whose thermal conductivity is k = 0.42 Btu/h⋅ft⋅°F. On a certain winter night, the temperatures of the inner and the outer surfaces of the wall a

> Engine oil at 40°C is flowing over a long flat plate with a velocity of 6 m/s. Determine the distance xcr from the leading edge of the plate where the flow becomes turbulent, and calculate and plot the thickness of the boundary layer over a length of 2xc

> An aluminum pan whose thermal conductivity is 237 W/mâ‹…K has a flat bottom with diameter 15 cm and thickness 0.4 cm. Heat is transferred steadily to boiling water in the pan through its bottom at a rate of 800 W. If the inner surface of

> Repeat Prob. 15–97 by considering the more general form of Stokes’ law expressed as FD = 3πμDV + (9π/16)ρV2D2 where ρ is the fluid density. Data from Prob. 15-97: During an experiment, three aluminum balls (ρs = 2600 kg/m3) having diameters 2, 4, and

> Reconsider Prob. 16–21. Using appropriate software, plot the amount of heat loss through the glass as a function of the window glass thickness in the range of 0.1 cm to 1.0 cm. Discuss the results. Data from Prob. 16-21: The inner and outer surfaces of

> Consider a 2100-kg car cruising at constant speed of 70 km/h. Now the car starts to pass another car by accelerating to 110 km/h in 5 s. Determine the additional power needed to achieve this acceleration. What would your answer be if the total mass of th

> During an experiment, three aluminum balls (ρs = 2600 kg/m3) having diameters 2, 4, and 10 mm, respectively, are dropped into a tank filled with glycerin at 22°C (ρf = 1274 kg/m3 and μ = 1 kg/m·s). The terminal settling velocities of the balls are meas

> The inner and outer surfaces of a 0.5-cm thick 2-m × 2-m window glass in winter are 10°C and 3°C, respectively. If the thermal conductivity of the glass is 0.78 W/m⋅K, determine the amount of heat loss through the glass over a period of 5 h. What would y

> A 17,000-kg tractor-trailer rig has a frontal area of 9.2 m2, a drag coefficient of 0.96, a rolling resistance coefficient of 0.05 (multiplying the weight of a vehicle by the rolling resistance coefficient gives the rolling resistance), a bearing fricti

> The inner and outer glasses of a 4-ft × 4-ft double-pane window are at 60°F and 48°F, respectively. If the 0.25-in space between the two glasses is filled with still air, determine the rate of heat transfer through the window.

> Consider a blimp that can be approximated as a 3-m diameter, 8-m long ellipsoid and is connected to the ground. On a windless day, the rope tension due to the net buoyancy effect is measured to be 120 N. Determine the rope tension when there are 50 km/h

> Which is a better heat conductor, diamond or silver?

> It is proposed to meet the water needs of a recreational vehicle (RV) by installing a 3-m-long, 0.5 m-diameter cylindrical tank on top of the vehicle. Determine the additional power needed at a speed of 80 km/h when the tank is installed such that its ci

> The inner and outer surfaces of a 4-m × 7-m brick wall of thickness 30 cm and thermal conductivity 0.69 W/m⋅K are maintained at temperatures of 20°C and 5°C, respectively. Determine the rate of heat tr

> A paratrooper and his 7-m-diameter parachute weigh 1200 N. Taking the average air density to be 1.2 kg/m3, determine the terminal velocity of the paratrooper.

> A wood slab with a thickness of 0.05 m is subjected to a heat flux of 40 W/m2. The left and right surface temperatures of the wood slab are kept at constant temperatures of 40°C and 20°C, respectively. What is the thermal conductivity of the wood slab?

> An escalator in a shopping center is designed to move 50 people, 75 kg each, at a constant speed of 0.6 m/s at 45° slope. Determine the minimum power input needed to drive this escalator. What would your answer be if the escalator velocity were to be dou

> An automotive engine can be approximated as a 0.4-m-high, 0.60-m-wide, and 0.7-m-long rectangular block. The ambient air is at 1 atm and 15°C. Determine the drag force acting on the bottom surface of the engine block as the car travels at a ve

> What is a blackbody? How do real bodies differ from blackbodies?

> A commercial airplane has a total mass of 150,000 lbm and a wing planform area of 1700 ft2. The plane has a cruising speed of 625 mi/h and a cruising altitude of 38,000 ft where the air density is 0.0208 lbm/ft3. The plane has double slotted flaps for us

> Define emissivity and absorptivity. What is Kirchhoff’s law of radiation?

> The passenger compartment of a minivan traveling at 50 mi/h in ambient air at 1 atm and 80°F is modeled as a 4.5-ft high, 6-ft-wide, and 11-ft-long rectangular box. The airflow over the exterior surfaces is assumed to be turbulent because of t

> Consider two walls of a house that are identical except that one is made of 10-cm-thick wood while the other is made of 25-cm-thick brick. Through which wall will the house lose more heat in winter?

> During flow over a given body, the drag force, the upstream velocity, and the fluid density are measured. Explain how you would determine the drag coefficient. What area would you use in the calculations?

> Consider two houses that are identical except that the walls are built using bricks in one house and wood in the other. If the walls of the brick house are twice as thick, which house do you think will be more energy efficient?

> Stokes’ law can be used to determine the viscosity of a fluid by dropping a spherical object in it and measuring the terminal velocity of the object in that fluid. This can be done by plotting the distance traveled against time and obse

> Reconsider Prob. 15–87. Using appropriate software, investigate the effect of boat speed on the drag force acting on the bottom surface of the boat, and the power needed to overcome it. Let the boat speed vary from 0 to 100 km/h in incr

> Consider a room that is initially at the outdoor temperature of 20°C. The room contains a 40-W lightbulb, a 110-W TV set, a 300-W refrigerator, and a 1200-W iron. Assuming no heat transfer through the walls, determine the rate of increase of the energy c

> Consider heat loss through two walls of a house on a winter night. The walls are identical except that one of them has a tightly fitted glass window. Through which wall will the house lose more heat? Explain.

> A plastic boat whose bottom surface can be approximated as a 1.5-m-wide, 2-m-long flat surface is to move through water at 15°C at speeds up to 45 km/h. Determine the friction drag exerted on the boat by the water and the power needed to overc

> Consider heat transfer through a windowless wall of a house on a winter day. Discuss the parameters that affect the rate of heat conduction through the wall.

> A 2-m-high, 4-m-wide rectangular advertisement panel is attached to a 4-m-wide, 0.15-m-high rectangular concrete block (density = 2300 kg/m3) by two 5-cm-diameter, 4-m-high (exposed part) poles, as shown in Fig. P15–86. If the sign is t

> What is the physical mechanism of heat conduction in a solid, a liquid, and a gas?

> A 7-ft-diameter spherical tank completely submerged in fresh water is being towed by a ship at 8 ft/s. Assuming turbulent flow, determine the required towing power.

> How does forced convection differ from natural convection?

> A 1.2-m-external-diameter spherical tank is located outdoors at 1 atm and 25°C and is subjected to winds at 48 km/h. Determine the drag force exerted on it by the wind.

> Define thermal conductivity, and explain its significance in heat transfer.

> An airplane is consuming fuel at a rate of 7 gal/min when cruising at a constant altitude of 10,000 ft at constant speed. Assuming the drag coefficient and the engine efficiency remain the same, determine the rate of fuel consumption at an altitude of 30

> The lighting needs of a storage room are being met by six fluorescent light fixtures, each fixture containing four lamps rated at 60 W each. All the lamps are on during operating hours of the facility, which are 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. 365 days a year. The stor

> An airplane has a mass of 48,000 kg, a wing area of 300 m2, a maximum lift coefficient of 3.2, and a cruising drag coefficient of 0.03 at an altitude of 12,000 m. Determine (a) the takeoff speed at sea level, assuming it is 20 percent over the stall spee

> A small airplane has a total mass of 1800 kg and a wing area of 42 m2. Determine the lift and drag coefficients of this airplane while cruising at an altitude of 4000 m at a constant speed of 280 km/h and generating 190 kW of power.

> Consider a light plane that has a total weight of 11,000 N and a wing area of 39 m2 and whose wings resemble the NACA 23012 airfoil with no flaps. Using data from Fig. 15–45, determine the takeoff speed at an angle of attack of 5° at sea level. Also dete

> Name some applications in which a large drag is desired.

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