Alasala Heat Experiment
Alasala Heat Experiment
Alasala Heat Experiment
College of Engineering
Department of Mechanical Engineering
Dr. H. R., Assistant Professor
COMPOSITE WALLS
ALASALA COLLEGES
College of Engineering
Department of Mechanical Engineering
Dr. H. R., Assistant Professor
Introduction
Heat transfer through composite walls is a concept that has attracted significant attention in different fields,
such as furnaces, cold storage rooms, and unit operations. Mostly, practical utility engineering applications
revolve around heat transfer through a specific medium consisting of two or more materials with different
thermal conductivities (Karthikeyan 12). Therefore, it primarily refers to the transport of energy between two
or more bodies with varying thermal conductivity arranged in parallel or series. Temperature difference among
the materials making the composite wall indicates that heat transfer has taken place. The amount of heat
transfer principally depends on the driving force, which is the temperature difference, and the thermal
resistance of the bodies used, such as aluminum, asbestos, and mild steel plates. The thermal conductivity of
the materials utilized relies on the temperature difference, while the heat transfer rate depends on the area of
the conducting material, the co-efficient of materials thermal conductivity, thickness of the bodies used, and
their temperature difference. Heat transfer through conduction occurs when the heated substance molecules
vibrate vigorously, thereby transferring heat when such molecules start moving from one position to the other.
When such molecules collide with others, they transfer some of their energy (Suresh and Chopra). Notably,
some materials are better conductors of heat than others, and most have a higher coefficient of thermal
conductivity. The materials that low conductors of heat are mostly used as insulators to minimize heat loss.
For instance, power cables, furnaces, and power transmission lines have insulators meant to minimize power
loss. The experiment involves heat transfer through a composite wall composed of copper, asbestos, mild
To determine rate of transfer of heat co efficient through composite material consisting of Copper, Asbestos,
Mild Steel, and Aluminum.
The complete setup of this experiment consists of following materials given below:
a) Composite Walls:
First one is composite walls which consist of a heater at one end with Mild Steel, Asbestos, Aluminum and
Copper plates composited to form heat flow path. To minimize heat loss test pieces are covered with MS Sheet
Guard.
b) Flat Heater:
Diameter of copper,
T1 : On Heater plate
T2 : On Copper plate
T3 : On Asbestos plate
T5 : On Aluminum plate
OPERATIONAL PROCEDURE:
Then I set the regulator of heat to adjust or you can control purpose.
ALASALA COLLEGES
College of Engineering
Department of Mechanical Engineering
Dr. H. R., Assistant Professor
After wait for some time, when temperature reached its steady state by time or you can say stable then
I noted the readings of the temperatures T1 to T5 using channel selector and digital Temperature
indicator
I also noted down the wattmeter reading and water flow rate by rotameter.
After then by using the temperatures, I calculated rate of heat transfer co-efficient through composite
wall using procedure given below
WORKING PRINCIPLE
The heat balance equation for one dimensional flow is given by, (neglecting losses in stable condition),
Q= Qi = Qaluminum=Qmild steel=Qasbestos=Qcopper
Where Qal, QM, Qas, QC are the same heat flowing across Aluminum, Mild Steel, Asbestos, and Copper
respectively. Qi is the overall heat flow across composite material.
Considering the individual material, the heat transmitted across each of the material is equal to heat input
through heater.
Q= m Cp (T7-T6)
ALASALA COLLEGES
College of Engineering
Department of Mechanical Engineering
Dr. H. R., Assistant Professor
Q ×L0
Kexp = -------------- in (W/moC)
A (T2-T5)
Where,
LO
Ktheo = --------------------------------------------------
(L1/K1) + (L2/K2) + (L3/K3) + (L4/K4)
TABULAR COLUMN:
Where
m=rvA
20 92.82 58 54 52 50 46 27 40 10 10.90 10.921
20 78.54 53 52 48 46 42 27 38 20 12.24 11.08
20 71.4 55 53 51 46 44 27 37 30 14.1 13.6
20 69.28 54 51 49 45 43 27 37 40 11.93 12.3
Calculations:
Firstly I noted the values of temperature by the help of thermocouples already installed in the apparatus. Then
I calculated the value of power input by applying formula:
Q= (V*I)/2
After then I calculated the values of K1, K2, K3, K4 by applying following formulas:
K1 = Thermal Conductivity of copper
K2 = Thermal Conductivity of aluminum.
K3 = Thermal Conductivity of asbestos.
K4 =Thermal Conductivity of mild steel.
Q L1
K1 =--------------------------
A (T1 – T2)
ALASALA COLLEGES
College of Engineering
Department of Mechanical Engineering
Dr. H. R., Assistant Professor
Q L2
K2= ------------------
A (T2 – T3)
Q L3
K3= ------------------
A (T3 – T4)
Q L4
K4= ------------------
A (T4 – T5)
After then by
putting all
values of K1,
K2, K3, K4
AND L1, L2,
L3, L4 we get
the theoretical
heat
coefficient.
LO
Ktheo = ---------------------------------------------------
(L1/K1) + (L2/K2) + (L3/K3) + (L4/K4)
After getting theoretical reading I then calculated the values of heat coefficient experimentally which is given
below:
ALASALA COLLEGES
College of Engineering
Department of Mechanical Engineering
Dr. Husam Rajab, Assistant Professor
Q Lo
Kexp = ------------- in W/moC
A (T2 – T5)
Q = m Cp (T7-T6)
SCHEMATIC DIAGRAM
T6 COOLING CHAMBER T7
Water T5
inlet ALLUMINIUM(T5)
T4 Water
outlet
MILD STEEL(T4)
T3
ASBESTOS (T3)
T2
COPPER(T2) Thermocouple
T1
HEATER(T1)
ALASALA COLLEGES
College of Engineering
Department of Mechanical Engineering
Dr. Husam Rajab, Assistant Professor
According to the experiment results and calculations, the water flow rate in kg/sec reduces as the
100
92.82
Water Flow Rate kg/sec
78.54
80 71.4 69.28
60
40
20
010 20 30 40
Additionally, both the theoretical overall heat transfer coefficient and experimental overall heat
transfer coefficient increased steadily up to 30 minutes take to reach a stable state, after which
Time Taken to Stable State Theoretical Overall Heat Experimental overall heat
ALASALA COLLEGES
College of Engineering
Department of Mechanical Engineering
Dr. Husam Rajab, Assistant Professor
Transfer transfer
Coefficient coefficient
10 10.90 10.921
20 12.24 11.08
30 14.1 13.6
40 11.93 12.3
12
Coefficients
010 20 30 40
Time to Stable State
The temperature at the heater plate reduced significantly through the other materials used as the
time to the stable state increased. Additionally, the water outlet temperature also decreased with
time from about 40oC to 37oC at the stable state. Despite having the same area, length, and
diameter, copper, asbestos, mild steel, and aluminum plates conducted heat differently. A
decrease in temperature contributed to the decreased water flow rate as the time taken to reach a
stable state increased. However, a decrease in temperature, despite the increased time taken to
reach a stable state, increased theoretical and experimental overall heat transfer coefficients. The
ALASALA COLLEGES
College of Engineering
Department of Mechanical Engineering
Dr. Husam Rajab, Assistant Professor
Conclusion
Heat transfer through conduction occurs when molecules of a heated body vibrate vigorously and
transfer heat when they move from one place to another. However, some materials are better
conductors of heat than others. Mostly poor conductors of heat are used as insulators to minimize
heat loss in different applications. The experiment involves heat transfer through a composite
wall comprised of copper, aluminum, asbestos, and mild steel plates. The plates have the same
dimensions, meaning that they have the same area. According to the data collected and
calculations, the water flow rate decreases as the temperature from one plate to the other reduces
and the time take to reach stable state increases. Additionally, the experimental and theoretical
heat transfer coefficients increase with a decrease in temperature to a maximum level and reduce
when the stable state is reached. The plates used to make the composite wall had varying thermal
conductivity with temperature differences between them. Therefore, heat transfer through a
composite wall is a significant experiment that demonstrates how heat can be transferred from
one material to another and its application in a wide range of engineering fields.
ALASALA COLLEGES
College of Engineering
Department of Mechanical Engineering
Dr. Husam Rajab, Assistant Professor
Works Cited
Karthikeyan, N. "Analysis the Thermal Conductivity between Composite Wall and Powder
Suresh, Bhangale Bhushan, and M. K. Chopra. "Analysis of Steady State Heat Conduction in