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Heat conduction



Heat conduction or thermal conduction is the spontaneous transfer of thermal energy through matter, from a region of higher temperature to a region of lower temperature, and hence acts to even out temperature differences.

The thermal energy, in the form of continuous random motion of the particles of the matter, is transferred by the same coulomb forces that act to support the structure of matter, so can be said to move by physical contact between the particles.

It should be noted that heat can also be transferred by radiation and/or convection, and often more than one of these processes occur in a particular situation.

The law of heat conduction, also known as Fourier's law, states that the time rate of heat transfer through a material is proportional to the negative gradient in the temperature and to the area at right angles, to that gradient, through which the heat is flowing:

\frac{\partial Q}{\partial t} = -k \oint_S{\nabla T \cdot \,dS}

where

Q is the amount of heat transferred,
t is the time taken,
k is the material's conductivity. (this generally varies with temperature, but the variation can be small over a significant range of temperatures for some common materials.),
S is the surface through which the heat is flowing,
T is the temperature.

  The above differential equation, when integrated for a simple linear situation (see diagram), where uniform temperature across equally sized end surfaces and perfectly insulated sides exist, gives the heat flow rate between the end surfaces as:

\frac{\Delta Q}{\Delta t} = -k A \frac{\Delta T}{\Delta x}

where

A is the cross-sectional surface area,
ΔT is the temperature difference between the ends,
Δx is the distance between the ends.

This law forms of the basis for the derivation of the heat equation. R-value is the unit for heat resistance, the reciprocal of the conductance. Ohm's law is the electrical analogue of Fourier's law.

Contents

Conductance

Writing

U = \frac{k}{\Delta x}, \quad

where U is the conductance.

Fourier's law can also be stated as:

Q = U A\, \Delta T \quad

The reciprocal of conductance is resistance, R, given by:

R = \frac{A\, \Delta T}{Q}, \quad

and it is resistance which is additive when several conducting layers lie between the hot and cool regions, because A and Q are the same for all layers. In a multilayer partition, the total conductance is related to the conductance of its layers by:

\frac{1}{U} = \frac{1}{U_1} + \frac{1}{U_2} + \frac{1}{U_3}+ \cdots

So, when dealing with a multilayer partition, the following formula is usually used:

Q = \frac{A\,\Delta T}{\frac{\Delta_1 x}{K_1} + \frac{\Delta_2 x}{K_2} + \frac{\Delta_3 x}{K_3}+ \cdots}

When heat is being conducted from one fluid to another through a barrier, it is sometimes important to consider the conductance of the thin film of fluid which remains stationary next to the barrier. This thin film of fluid is difficult to quantify, its characteristics depending upon complex conditions of turbulence and viscosity, but when dealing with thin high-conductance barriers it can sometimes be quite significant.

Newton's law of cooling

A related principle, Newton's law of cooling, states that the rate of heat loss of a body is proportional to the difference in temperatures between the body and its surroundings. The law is

\frac{d Q}{d t} = h \cdot A(T_{0} - T_{a})
Q = Thermal energy transfer in Joules
h = Heat transfer coefficient
A = Surface area of the heat being transferred
T0 = Temperature of the object's surface
Ta = Temperature of the surroundings

This form of heat loss principle is sometimes not very precise; an accurate formulation may require analysis of heat flow, based on the (transient) heat transfer equation in a nonhomogeneous, or else poorly conductive, medium. The following simplification may be applied so long as it is permitted by the Biot number, which relates surface conductance to interior thermal conductivity in a body. If this ratio permits, it shows that the body has relatively high internal conductivity, such that (to good approximation) the entire body is at same uniform temperature as it is cooled from the outside, by the environment. If this is the case, then it is easy to derive from these conditions the behavior of exponential decay of temperature of a body. In such cases, the entire body is treated as lumped capacitance heat reservoir, with total heat content which is proportional to simple total heat capacity, and the temperature of the body. If T(t) is the temperature of such a body at time t, and Tenv is the temperature of the environment around the body, then

\frac{d T(t)}{d t} = - r (T - T_{\mathrm{env}})

where

r is a positive constant characteristic of the system, which must be in units of 1/time, and is therefore sometimes expressed in terms of a time constant: r = 1/t0.

The solution of this differential equation, by standard methods of integration and substitution of boundary conditions, gives:

T(t) = T_{\mathrm{env}} + (T(0) - T_{\mathrm{env}}) \ e^{-r t}. \quad

Here, T(t) is the temperature at time t, and T(0) is the initial temperature at zero time, or t = 0.

If:

\Delta T(t) \quad is defined as : T(t) - T_{\mathrm{env}} \ , \quad where \Delta T(0)\quad is the initial temperature difference at time 0,

then the Newtonian solution is written as:

\Delta T(t) = \Delta T(0) \ e^{-r t}. \quad


Uses: For example, simplified climate models may use Newtonian cooling instead of a full (and computationally expensive) radiation code to maintain atmospheric temperatures.

Fourier's law of conduction

\overrightarrow{q}=-\overrightarrow{\overrightarrow{k}}\nabla T

where

\overrightarrow{q}: heat flux vector [ J·m−2·s−1 ]
T: temperature [ K ]
\overrightarrow{\overrightarrow{k}}: thermal conductivity tensor [ W·m−1·K−1 ]

See also

 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Heat_conduction". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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