Fundamentals of Heat and Mass Transfer
7th Edition
ISBN: 9780470917855
Author: Bergman, Theodore L./
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Textbook Question
Chapter 1, Problem 1.32P
Consider the conditions of Problem 1.22. However, nowthe plate is in a vacuum with a surrounding temperatureof 25°C. What is the emissivity of the plate? What is therate at which radiation is emitted by the surface?
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
A 3x3m plate at 500 degC is suspended vertically in a very large room. The plate has an
emissivity of 0.13, The room is at 25degC. What is the net heat transfer from the plate?
Heat radiates from a small sphere suspended in a large room. The surfaceof the sphere of 1.5 sq. Ft. is at a temperature of 580 °F, and the insidesurfaces of the room are at a temperature of 80 °F. Assuming the emissivity ofthe sphere surface to be 0.30, calculate the radian-heat transfer in BTU/hr.
A room is to be heated with a sphere containing 1 metric tonne of hot water via radiation of
energy (its closed system and convection is negligible). The heat loss from the room is
2kW. What temperature (in K) would the sphere of water need to maintain for steady state
conditions in the room? Assume perfect blackbody.
Chapter 1 Solutions
Fundamentals of Heat and Mass Transfer
Ch. 1 - The thermal conductivity of a sheet of rigid,...Ch. 1 - The heat flux that is applied to the left face of...Ch. 1 - A concrete wall, which has a surface area of 20m2...Ch. 1 - The concrete slab of a basement is 11 in long. 8...Ch. 1 - Consider Figure 1.3. The heat flux in the...Ch. 1 - The heal flux through a wood slab 50 mm thick,...Ch. 1 - The inner and outer surface temperatures of a...Ch. 1 - A thermodynamic analysis of a proposed Brayton...Ch. 1 - A glass window of width W=1m and height H=2m is 5...Ch. 1 - A freezer compartment consists of a cubical cavity...
Ch. 1 - The heat flux that is applied to one face of a...Ch. 1 - An inexpensive food and beverage container is...Ch. 1 - What is the thickness required of a masonry wall...Ch. 1 - A wall is made from an inhomogeneous...Ch. 1 - The 5-mm-thick bottom of a 200-mm-diameter panmay...Ch. 1 - A square silicon chip (k=150W/mK) is of width...Ch. 1 - For a boiling process such as shown in Figure 1.5...Ch. 1 - You’ve experienced convection cooling if you’ve...Ch. 1 - Air at 40°C flows over a long, 25-mm-diameter...Ch. 1 - A wall has inner and outer surface temperatures of...Ch. 1 - An electric resistance heater is embedded in a...Ch. 1 - The free convection heat transfer coefficient on a...Ch. 1 - A transmission case measures W=0.30m on a sideand...Ch. 1 - A cartridge electrical heater is shaped as a...Ch. 1 - A common procedure for measuring the velocity of...Ch. 1 - A square isothermal chip is of width w=5mm on...Ch. 1 - The temperature controller for a clothes dryer...Ch. 1 - An overhead 25-m-long, uninsulated industrial...Ch. 1 - Under conditions for which the same room...Ch. 1 - A spherical interplanetary probe of 0.5-m diameter...Ch. 1 - An instrumentation package has a spherical outer...Ch. 1 - Consider the conditions of Problem 1.22. However,...Ch. 1 - If TsTsur in Equation 1.9, the radiation heat...Ch. 1 - A vacuum system, as used ¡n sputtering...Ch. 1 - An electrical resistor is connected to a battery,...Ch. 1 - Pressurized water (pin=10bar,Tin=110C) enters...Ch. 1 - Consider the tube and inlet conditions of Problem...Ch. 1 - An internally reversible refrigerator has a...Ch. 1 - A household refrigerator operates with cold-...Ch. 1 - Chips of width L=15mm on a side are mounted to...Ch. 1 - Consider the transmission case of Problem 1...Ch. 1 - One method for growing thin silicon sheets for...Ch. 1 - Heat is transferred by radiation and convection...Ch. 1 - Radioactive wastes are packed in a long,...Ch. 1 - An aluminum plate 4 mm thick is mounted in a...Ch. 1 - A blood warmer is to be used during the...Ch. 1 - Consider a carton of milk that is refrigerated at...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.48PCh. 1 - Liquid oxygen, which has a boiling into of 90 K...Ch. 1 - The emissivity of galvanized steel sheet, a...Ch. 1 - Three electric resistance heaters of length...Ch. 1 - A hair dryer may be idealized as a circular duct...Ch. 1 - In one stage of an annealing process, 304...Ch. 1 - Convection ovens operate on the principle of...Ch. 1 - Annealing, an important step ¡n semiconductor...Ch. 1 - In the thermal processing of semiconductor...Ch. 1 - A furnace tor processing semiconductor materials...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.58PCh. 1 - Consider the wind turbine of Example 1.3. To...Ch. 1 - Consider the conducting rod of Example 1.4...Ch. 1 - A long bus bar (cylindrical rod used for making...Ch. 1 - A 50mm45mm20mm cell phone chargerhas a surface...Ch. 1 - A spherical, stainless steel (AISI 302) canister...Ch. 1 - A freezer compartment is covered with a...Ch. 1 - A vertical slab of Wood’s metal is joined to a...Ch. 1 - A photovoltaic panel of dimension 2m4m isinstalled...Ch. 1 - Following the hot vacuum forming of a...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.69PCh. 1 - A computer consists of an array of five printed...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.71PCh. 1 - The roof of a car in a parking lot absorbs a solar...Ch. 1 - Consider the conditions of Problem 1.22,but the...Ch. 1 - Most of the energy we consume as food ¡s converted...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.75PCh. 1 - The wall of an oven used to cure plastic parts is...Ch. 1 - An experiment to determine the convection...Ch. 1 - A thin electrical heating element provides a...Ch. 1 - A rectangular forced air healing duct is suspended...Ch. 1 - Consider the steam pipe of Example 1.2. The...Ch. 1 - During its manufacture, plate glass at 600°C is...Ch. 1 - The curing press of Example 1.9 involves exposure...Ch. 1 - The diameter and surface emissivity of an...Ch. 1 - Prob. 1.84PCh. 1 - A solar flux of 700W/m2K is incident on a...Ch. 1 - In considering the following problems involving...
Knowledge Booster
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, mechanical-engineering and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- A spherical interplanetary probe of 0.5 m diameter contains electronics that dissipate 150 W. If the probe surface has an emissivity of 0.9 and the probe does not receive radiation from other surfaces, as, for example, from the sun, what is its surface temperature?arrow_forwardAn electric hot plate is placed in a room which is maintained at a temperature of 297 K. The plate is maintained at a temperature of 403 K and has an emissivity of 0.8. If the plate surface resembles a circular disc of diameter 250 mm, electrical power consumed by the hot plate will be?arrow_forwardA spherical ball of radius 0.62 m and surface temperature 554 oC is suspended vertically in a'very large room. The emissivity of the ball is 0.33. The surrounding room is at a temperature of 200C. What is the net rate of heat transfer from the ball?arrow_forward
- Liquefied natural gas (LNG) is transported around the globe using ships similar to thatshown in Figure QA3. This ship has four pressurised cylindrical steel tanks each ofradius of 20 m. The tanks are internally insulated with 30 cm of polyurethane foamwhich keeps the LNG at a constant -162 ºC. Take the effective sky temperature is 265K and the net radiative thermal energy exchange with the sky as 1x10^6 W. (a) Calculate the surface temperature of the end (facing the sun) of a tank.(b) Calculate the conductive heat transfer through the end (facing the sun)of a tank. DATA FOR QUESTION: Thermal conductivity, polyurethane foam = 0.02 W/mKStefan’s Constant = 5.67x10^-8 W/m^2K^4Emissivity, steel = 0.95 answers: a) 375K b) 22.1kWarrow_forwardLiquefied natural gas (LNG) is transported around the globe using ships similar to thatshown in Figure QA3. This ship has four pressurised cylindrical steel tanks each ofradius of 20 m. The tanks are internally insulated with 30 cm of polyurethane foamwhich keeps the LNG at a constant -162 ºC. Take the effective sky temperature is 265K and the net radiative thermal energy exchange with the sky as 1x106 W. Calculate the surface temperature of the end (facing the sun) of a tank. Calculate the conductive heat transfer through the end (facing the sun)of a tank.arrow_forwardLiquefied natural gas (LNG) is transported around the globe using ships similar to thatshown in Figure QA3. This ship has four pressurised cylindrical steel tanks each ofradius of 20 m. The tanks are internally insulated with 30 cm of polyurethane foamwhich keeps the LNG at a constant -162 ºC. Take the effective sky temperature is 265K and the net radiative thermal energy exchange with the sky as 1x10^6 W. (a) Calculate the surface temperature of the end (facing the sun) of a tank.(b) Calculate the conductive heat transfer through the end (facing the sun)of a tank. answers: a) 375K b) 22.1kWarrow_forward
- 1. Consider a spaceship that has a volume V = 3000 m³, is effectively spherical in shape and has a density comparable to water (p = 1000 kg m-3). It absorbs CMB radiation (TCMB = 2.73K) and radiates its own radiation with a blackbody spectrum of T = 300K. What is its mass, radius and surface area? At what rate does it absorb energy from the CMB? (Hint: You can use the Stefan-Boltzmann law.) How many CMB photons are absorbed per а. b. с. second? d. At what rate does it emit energy through blackbody radiation? What is the net rate that the spaceship temperature would change if the spaceship has an е. effective heat capacity of pure water: C = 4200 J kg-1K-1 ?arrow_forwardTwo parallel rectangular surfaces 1m x 2m are opposite to each other at adistance of 4 m. The surfaces are black and at 100 °C and 200 °C, respectively.Calculate the heat exchange by radiation between the two surfaces.arrow_forward40% of incident radiant energy on the surface of thermally transparent body is reflected back, if the transmissivity of the body be 0.15 then emissivity of the surface is–arrow_forward
- Heat lossarrow_forwardEarth absorbs solar energy and radiates infrared energy. The intensity of the solar radiation incident on earth is J = 1350 Wm-2, also known as the solar constant. Assume earth’s surface (ground) temperature to be uniform at Ts, and that the ground and atmosphere are black (emissivity = 1) for infrared radiation. The radius of the earth is 6.378 x 106 m. The diagram shows the ground at the surface temperature Ts and the atmosphere, represented as a thin black layer, at temperature Ta . Suppose the atmosphere absorbs 100% of the infrared radiation emitted by the ground. Assume that the ground absorbs 47.5% of the incident solar energy, and that the atmosphere absorbs 17.5% of the incident solar energy (for a total of 65% absorbed by the planet). Calculate the "steady state” numerical values of the earth’s ground temperature Ts and the atmospheric temperature Ta taking into account the “greenhouse effect” of atmospheric infrared absorption and emission described above.arrow_forwardMolten metal at 2000 C is poured using crucible. The liquid metal jet has a diameter of 3 mm with an insulation shield of 5 cm diameter. There is a slit of 30 degrees around the insulation shield. The temperature inside the room is 30 C and the shield is 700 C. Assuming black bodies, find the net heat transfer between jet and shield, jet and room, shield and the room. One of the steps is wrong? Slit doesnot participate in radiation To find the view factor between metal and shield , ratio of the angles is used View factors are one of the most important steps to solve the problem None of the given Resistance network is required to be builtarrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Principles of Heat Transfer (Activate Learning wi...Mechanical EngineeringISBN:9781305387102Author:Kreith, Frank; Manglik, Raj M.Publisher:Cengage Learning
Principles of Heat Transfer (Activate Learning wi...
Mechanical Engineering
ISBN:9781305387102
Author:Kreith, Frank; Manglik, Raj M.
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Heat Transfer – Conduction, Convection and Radiation; Author: NG Science;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Me60Ti0E_rY;License: Standard youtube license