Chap04 PPT
Chap04 PPT
Chap04 PPT
Fourth Edition
Yunus A. Cengel, Afshin J. Ghajar
McGraw-Hill, 2011
Chapter 4
TRANSIENT HEAT CONDUCTION
Copyright © 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Objectives
• Assess when the spatial variation of temperature is
negligible, and temperature varies nearly uniformly with
time, making the simplified lumped system analysis
applicable
• Obtain analytical solutions for transient one-dimensional
conduction problems in rectangular, cylindrical, and
spherical geometries using the method of separation of
variables, and understand why a one-term solution is
usually a reasonable approximation
• Solve the transient conduction problem in large mediums
using the similarity variable, and predict the variation of
temperature with time and distance from the exposed
surface
• Construct solutions for multi-dimensional transient
conduction problems using the product solution approach
2
LUMPED SYSTEM ANALYSIS
Interior temperature of some
bodies remains essentially
uniform at all times during a
heat transfer process.
The temperature of such
bodies can be taken to be a
function of time only, T(t).
Heat transfer analysis that
utilizes this idealization is
known as lumped system
analysis.
time
constant
4
• This equation enables us to
determine the temperature
T(t) of a body at time t, or
alternatively, the time t
required for the temperature
to reach a specified value T(t).
• The temperature of a body
approaches the ambient
temperature T∞ exponentially.
• The temperature of the body
changes rapidly at the
beginning, but rather slowly
later on. A large value of b
indicates that the body
approaches the environment
temperature in a short time
The temperature of a lumped system
approaches the environment
temperature as time gets larger. 5
The rate of convection heat
transfer between the body
and its environment at time t
Biot number
7
Small bodies with high
thermal conductivities
and low convection
coefficients are most
likely to satisfy the
criterion for lumped
system analysis.
8
TRANSIENT HEAT CONDUCTION IN LARGE PLANE
WALLS, LONG CYLINDERS, AND SPHERES WITH
SPATIAL EFFECTS
We will consider the variation of temperature
with time and position in one-dimensional
problems such as those associated with a large
plane wall, a long cylinder, and a sphere.
Schematic of the
simple geometries in
which heat transfer is
one-dimensional. 9
Nondimensionalized One-Dimensional Transient
Conduction Problem
10
Approximate Analytical and Graphical Solutions
The terms in the series solutions converge rapidly with increasing time,
and for τ > 0.2, keeping the first term and neglecting all the remaining
terms in the series results in an error under 2 percent.
Solution with one-term approximation
11
12
(a) Midplane temperature
15
The dimensionless temperatures anywhere in a plane wall,
cylinder, and sphere are related to the center temperature by
20
Error function is a standard
mathematical function, just like the
sine and cosine functions, whose
value varies between 0 and 1.
21
Analytical
solutions for
different
boundary
conditions on
the surface
22
Dimensionless
temperature distribution
for transient conduction
in a semi-infinite solid
whose surface is
maintained at a constant
temperature Ts.
23
Variation of temperature with position and time in a semi-infinite
solid initially at temperature Ti subjected to convection to an 24
environment at T∞ with a convection heat transfer coefficient of h.
TRANSIENT HEAT CONDUCTION IN
MULTIDIMENSIONAL SYSTEMS
• Using a superposition approach called the product solution, the transient
temperature charts and solutions can be used to construct solutions for the two-
dimensional and three-dimensional transient heat conduction problems
encountered in geometries such as a short cylinder, a long rectangular bar, a
rectangular prism or a semi-infinite rectangular bar, provided that all surfaces of
the solid are subjected to convection to the same fluid at temperature T∞, with the
same heat transfer coefficient h, and the body involves no heat generation.
• The solution in such multidimensional geometries can be expressed as the
product of the solutions for the one-dimensional geometries whose intersection
is the multidimensional geometry.
26
A long solid bar of rectangular profile
a × b is the intersection of two plane
walls of thicknesses a and b.
27
The transient heat transfer for a two-dimensional
geometry formed by the intersection of two one-
dimensional geometries 1 and 2 is
28
Multidimensional solutions expressed as products of one-dimensional
solutions for bodies that are initially at a uniform temperature Ti and
exposed to convection from all surfaces to a medium at T∞
29
Multidimensional solutions expressed as products of one-dimensional
solutions for bodies that are initially at a uniform temperature Ti and exposed
to convection from all surfaces to a medium at T∞
30
Summary
• Lumped System Analysis
Criteria for Lumped System Analysis
Some Remarks on Heat Transfer in Lumped Systems
• Transient Heat Conduction in Large Plane Walls, Long
Cylinders, and Spheres with Spatial Effects
Nondimensionalized One-Dimensional Transient Conduction
Problem
Exact Solution of One-Dimensional Transient Conduction
Problem
Approximate Analytical and Graphical Solutions
• Transient Heat Conduction in Semi-Infinite Solids
Contact of Two Semi-Infinite Solids
• Transient Heat Conduction in Multidimensional Systems
31