Fundamentals of Heat and Mass Transfer
Fundamentals of Heat and Mass Transfer
7th Edition
ISBN: 9780470501979
Author: Frank P. Incropera, David P. DeWitt, Theodore L. Bergman, Adrienne S. Lavine
Publisher: Wiley, John & Sons, Incorporated
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Chapter 2, Problem 2.52P

A chemically reacting mixture is stored in a thin-walled spherical container of radius r 1 = 200 mm, and the exothermic reaction generates heat at a uniform, but temperature-dependent volumetric rate of q . = q . o exp ( A / T o ) , where q . o = 5000 W/m 3 , A = 75 K, and T o is the mixture temperature in kelvins. vessel is enclosed by an insulating material of outer radius r 2 , thermal conductivity k, and emissivity ε . The outer surface of the insulation experiences convection heat transfer and net radiation exchange with the adjoining air and large surroundings, respectively.
Chapter 2, Problem 2.52P, A chemically reacting mixture is stored in a thin-walled spherical container of radius r1=200mm, and

  1. Write the steady-state form of the heat diffusion equation for the insulation. Verify that this equation is satisfied by the temperature distribution
    T ( r ) = T s , 1 ( T s , 1 T s , 2 ) [ 1 ( r 1 / r ) 1 ( r 1 / r 2 ) ]
    Sketch the temperature distribution, T ( r ) , labeling key features.
  2. Applying Fourier's law. show that the rate of heat transfer by conduction through the insulation may be expressed as

  3. q r = 4 π k ( T s , 1 T s , 2 ) ( 1 / r 1 ) ( 1 / r 2 )
    Applying an energy balance to a control surface about the container. obtain an alternative expression for q r , expressing your result in terms of q . and r 1 .
  4. Applying an energy balance to a control surface placed around the outer surface of the insulation, obtain an expression from which may be T s , 2 determined as a function of q . , r 1 , h , T , ε , and T sur .
  5. The process engineer wishes to maintain a reactor temperature of T o = T ( r 1 ) = 95 ° C under conditions for which k = 0.05 W/m K, r 2 = 208 mm, h = 5 W/m 2 K, ε = 0.9 , T = 25 ° C, and T s u r = 35 ° C . What is the actual reactor temperature and the outer surface temperature T s , 2 of the insulation?
  6. Compute and plot the variation of T s , 2 with r 2 for 201 r 2 210 mm . The engineer is concerned about potential burn injuries to personnel who may come into contact with the exposed surface of the insulation. Is increasing the insulation thickness a practical solution to maintaining T s , 2 45 ° C? What other parameter could be varied to reduce T s , 2 ?

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1. One mole of an ideal gas at 10 atm pressure is contained in a vessel at 300K. The gas is expanded till the pressure becomes 2 atm and the temperature reaches 400K. Calculate the work done on the system and the heat absorbed by it if the change is brought about by the following processes:A] The gas is expanded isothermally against a constant external pressure of 2 atm, then heated to the desired temperature at constant volume, and finally expanded till the final state is reached.B] The gas is expanded by an isothermal reversible process, then heated to 400K, and again expanded reversibly till he final state is reached.C] The gas is first heated in an isochoric process and then expanded reversibly in an isothermal process.
2. Two insulated cylinders A and B with volumes VA = 2.0 m³ and VB = 5.8 m³ contain chlorine gas at different pressures and temperatures. The cylinders are insulated (no heat is lost to or gained from the outside) and connected by a valve. Initially, the valve is) closed and the gas in the two cylinders has the following values: PA = 4.0x105 N/m², TA = 210 K, PB = 2.5x105 N/m², TB = 580 K. The valve is opened to allow the contents in the two cylinders to mix until the pressure equalizes. valve B a. Assuming there is no change in the temperatures of the containers themselves, determine the final temperature of the gas in the two cylinders. The atomic mass of chlorine gas is 35.4527 u. (1 u = 1.67377x1027 kg) b. Determine the final pressure?
NOTE: Complete solution and show the derivation/cancellation of units. N m An ideal gas has a gas constant of 319.8 kg K and a gas ratio of 1.26. Calculate the heat rejected per kg of gas: A. when the gas is contained in a rigid vessel at 3 bar and 315°C and then cooled until the pressure falls to 1.5 bar. B. when the gas enters a pipeline at 280°C and flows steadily at constant pressure to the end of the pipe where the temperature is 20°C.

Chapter 2 Solutions

Fundamentals of Heat and Mass Transfer

Ch. 2 - Consider steady-state conditions for...Ch. 2 - Consider a plane wall 100 mm thick and of thermal...Ch. 2 - A cylinder of radius ro, length L, and thermal...Ch. 2 - In the two-dimensional body illustrated, the...Ch. 2 - Consider the geometry of Problem 2.14 for the case...Ch. 2 - Steady-state, one-dimensional conduction occurs in...Ch. 2 - An apparatus for measuring thermal conductivity...Ch. 2 - An engineer desires to measure the thermal...Ch. 2 - Consider a 300mm300mm window in an aircraft. For a...Ch. 2 - Consider a small but known volume of metal that...Ch. 2 - Use INT to perform the following tasks. Graph the...Ch. 2 - Calculate the thermal conductivity of air,...Ch. 2 - A method for determining the thermal conductivity...Ch. 2 - Compare and contrast the heat capacity cp of...Ch. 2 - A cylindrical rod of stainless steel is insulated...Ch. 2 - At a given instant of time, the temperature...Ch. 2 - A pan is used to boil water by placing it on a...Ch. 2 - Uniform internal heat generation at q=5107W/m3 is...Ch. 2 - Consider a one-dimensional plane wall with...Ch. 2 - The steady-state temperature distribution in a...Ch. 2 - The temperature distribution across a wall 0.3 m...Ch. 2 - Prob. 2.33PCh. 2 - One-dimensional, steady-state conduction with...Ch. 2 - Derive the heat diffusion equation, Equation 2.26,...Ch. 2 - Derive the heat diffusion equation, Equation 2.29....Ch. 2 - The steady-state temperature distribution in a...Ch. 2 - One-dimensional, steady-state conduction with no...Ch. 2 - One-dimensional, steady-state conduction with no...Ch. 2 - The steady-state temperature distribution in a...Ch. 2 - Prob. 2.41PCh. 2 - Prob. 2.42PCh. 2 - cylindrical system illustrated has negligible...Ch. 2 - Beginning with a differential control volume in...Ch. 2 - Prob. 2.45PCh. 2 - Prob. 2.46PCh. 2 - For a long circular tube of inner and outer radii...Ch. 2 - Passage of an electric current through a long...Ch. 2 - Two-dimensional. steady-state conduction occurs in...Ch. 2 - An electric cable of radius r1 and thermal...Ch. 2 - A spherical shell of inner and outer radii ri and...Ch. 2 - A chemically reacting mixture is stored in a...Ch. 2 - A thin electrical heater dissipating 4000W/m2 is...Ch. 2 - The one-dimensional system of mass M with constant...Ch. 2 - Consider a one-dimensional plane wall of thickness...Ch. 2 - A large plate of thickness 2L is at a uniform...Ch. 2 - The plane wall with constant properties and no...Ch. 2 - Consider the steady-state temperature...Ch. 2 - A plane wall has constant properties, no internal...Ch. 2 - A plane wall with constant properties is initially...Ch. 2 - Consider the conditions associated with Problem...Ch. 2 - Consider the steady-state temperature distribution...Ch. 2 - A spherical particle of radius r1 experiences...Ch. 2 - Prob. 2.64PCh. 2 - A plane wall of thickness L=0.1m experiences...Ch. 2 - Prob. 2.66PCh. 2 - A composite one-dimensional plane wall is of...Ch. 2 - Typically, air is heated in a hair dryer by...Ch. 2 - Prob. 2.69P

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