0% found this document useful (0 votes)
122 views3 pages

Work 4 - Perpandas-2019 PDF

This document contains 5 homework problems related to heat transfer: 1) A motor transfers power to a pump through a copper shaft. The problem asks to calculate the temperature at one end of the shaft given various parameters like material properties, temperatures, heat transfer coefficients, and power values. 2) A cylindrical rod experiences internal heat generation and is surrounded by a sleeve. The problem asks to find interface and outer surface temperatures, and the temperature at the center of the rod. 3) A composite wall made of three materials considers heat generation in one material and asks to sketch the steady-state temperature distributions for two cases. 4) A wall consists of brick, plaster and foam layers, and the problem

Uploaded by

rafiqi khairal
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
122 views3 pages

Work 4 - Perpandas-2019 PDF

This document contains 5 homework problems related to heat transfer: 1) A motor transfers power to a pump through a copper shaft. The problem asks to calculate the temperature at one end of the shaft given various parameters like material properties, temperatures, heat transfer coefficients, and power values. 2) A cylindrical rod experiences internal heat generation and is surrounded by a sleeve. The problem asks to find interface and outer surface temperatures, and the temperature at the center of the rod. 3) A composite wall made of three materials considers heat generation in one material and asks to sketch the steady-state temperature distributions for two cases. 4) A wall consists of brick, plaster and foam layers, and the problem

Uploaded by

rafiqi khairal
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 3

Home Work 2 (Problem Set 4), 2019 (Week 5)

MS3120 Basic Heat Transfer

Problem 1

A motor draws electric power Pelec from a supply line and delivers mechanical
power Pmech to a pump through a rotating copper shaft of thermal conductivity ks,
length L, and diameter D. The motor is mounted on a square pad of width W,
thickness t, and thermal conductivity kp. The surface of the housing exposed to
ambient air at T∞ is of area Ah, and the corresponding convection coefficient is hh.
Opposite ends of the shaft are at temperatures of Th and T∞, and heat transfer from
the shaft to the ambient air is characterized by the convection coefficient hs. The
base of the pad is at T∞. What is the value of Th if Pelec = 25 kW, Pmech =15 kW,
ks = 400 W/m K, L = 0.6 m, D = 0.05 m, W = 0.7 m, t = 0.05 m, kp = 0.5 W/m K,
Ah = 2 m2, hh = 10 W/m2 K, hs = 300 W/m2 K, and T∞ = 27oC?

Problem 2

A long cylindrical rod of diameter 200 mm with thermal conductivity of 0.5 W/m K
experiences uniform volumetric heat generation of 25,000 W/m3. The rod is encapsulated by a
circular sleeve having an outer diameter of 400 mm and a thermal conductivity of 4 W/m K.
The outer surface of the sleeve is exposed to cross flow of air at 27oC with a convection
coefficient of 25 W/m2 K. (a) Find the temperature at the interface between the rod and sleeve
and on the outer surface. (b) What is the temperature at the center of the rod?

Problem 3
Consider a plane composite wall that is composed of three materials (materials A, B, and C are arranged
left to right) of thermal conductivities kA = 0.24 W/m K, kB = 0.13 W/m K, and kC = 0.50 W/m K. The
thicknesses of the three sections of the wall are LA = 20 mm, LB = 13 mm, and LC = 20 mm. A contact
resistance of Rt,c = 10-2 m2 K/W exists at the interface between materials A and B, as well as at the
interface between materials B and C. The left face of the composite wall is insulated, while the right
face is exposed to convective conditions characterized by h = 10 W/m2 K, T∞ = 20oC. For Case 1,
thermal energy is generated within material A at the rate qA = 5000 W/m3. For Case 2, thermal energy
is generated within material C at the rate qC = 5000 W/m3. (a) Determine the maximum temperature
within the composite wall under steady-state conditions for Case 1.
(b) Sketch the steady-state temperature distribution on T - x coordinates for Case 1.
(c) Sketch the steady-state temperature distribution for Case 2 on the same T-x coordinates used for
Case 1.

Problem 4

A 4-m-high and 6-m-wide wall consists of a long 18-cm × 30-cm cross section of horizontal
bricks (k _ 0.72 W/m °C) separated by 3-cm-thick plaster layers (k = 0.22 W/m °C). There are
also 2-cm-thick plaster layers on each side of the wall, and a 2-cm-thick rigid foam (k =0.026
W/m °C) on the inner side of the wall. The indoor and the outdoor temperatures are 22°C and
-4°C, and the convection heat transfer coefficients on the inner and the outer sides are h1 = 10
W/m2 °C and h2 = 20 W/m2 °C, respectively. Assuming one-dimensional heat transfer and
disregarding radiation, determine the rate of heat transfer through the wall.

Problem 5

Hot water at an average temperature of 95°C is flowing through a 15-m section of a cast iron
pipe (k = 52 W/m °C) whose inner and outer diameters are 4 cm and 4.6 cm, respectively.
The outer surface of the pipe, whose emissivity is 0.7, is exposed to the cold air at 10°C in
the basement, with a heat transfer coefficient of 15 W/m2 °C. The heat transfer coefficient at
the inner surface of the pipe is 120 W/m2 °C. Taking the walls of the basement to be at 10°C
also, determine the rate of heat loss from the hot water. Also, determine the average velocity
of the water in the pipe if the temperature of the water drops by 3°C as it passes through the
basement.

You might also like

pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy