HT Lab 1
HT Lab 1
HT Lab 1
(1)
THERMAL CONDUCTIVITY OF
INSULATING POWDER
EXPERIMENT NO. 1
INTRODUCTION:
In almost all industries heat transfer equipments play an important role, where from economy point
of view it is very essential to minimize heat losses to the surrounding. This leads to increase an
overall efficiency of thermal system. In such cases, the surface of equipment prone to heat loss is
covered by a material of lower thermal conductivity called as insulator. There is an ample demand
for such materials in engineering industry due to which many industries have come up to produce
such materials in different categories, shapes, and sizes. It is utmost important to select proper
category of insulating material for the case in hand. Selection of insulating material is always
dependent on working temperature range, shape and size of the systems to be insulated. One
important category of insulating material is in powder form. The obvious reason is the powder can
take any complicated shape between any two containing surfaces. Also, its thermal conductivity
is much lower than that of its basic solid form. This is because of the larger number of air gaps
present within powder. This experiment therefore aims to determine thermal conductivity of an
insulating material in powder form.
EXPERIMENTAL ANALYSIS:
A. Experimental set-up:
Experimental facility consists of two thin-walled concentric copper spheres. The inner sphere
houses heating element. The insulating powder filled in the annular gap between the two copper
spheres, takes the form of a hollow sphere. The power supply to heater coil is controlled by a
dimmerstat and is measured by voltmeter and ammeter. Four chromel-alumel thermocouples are
used to measure the temperatures at inner and outer surface of insulating powder sphere.
Thermocouples T1 and T2 are embedded closure to the outer surface of inner sphere and
thermocouples T3 and T4 are embedded closure to the inner surface of outer sphere.
B. Theory:
C. Procedure:
TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS:
OBSERVATION TABLE:
CALCULATIONS:
Use equations explained above in experiment theory to calculate thermal conductivity of given
insulating powder,
a) Ti =
b) To =
c) q =
d) k =
RESULT TABLE:
Experimental set-up: