enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Heat flux - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heat_flux

    In physics and engineering, heat flux or thermal flux, sometimes also referred to as heat flux density [1], heat-flow density or heat-flow rate intensity, is a flow of energy per unit area per unit time. Its SI units are watts per square metre (W/m 2). It has both a direction and a magnitude, and so it is a vector quantity.

  3. Rate of heat flow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rate_of_heat_flow

    The rate of heat flow is the amount of heat that is transferred per unit of time in some material, usually measured in watts (joules per second). Heat is the flow of thermal energy driven by thermal non-equilibrium, so the term 'heat flow' is a redundancy (i.e. a pleonasm). Heat must not be confused with stored thermal energy, and moving a hot ...

  4. Heat transfer coefficient - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heat_transfer_coefficient

    However, one needs to select if the heat flux is based on the pipe inner or the outer diameter. If the heat flux is based on the inner diameter of the pipe, and if the pipe wall is thin compared to this diameter, the curvature of the wall has a negligible effect on heat transfer. In this case, the pipe wall can be approximated as a flat plane ...

  5. Thermal conductance and resistance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermal_conductance_and...

    A 2008 review paper written by Philips researcher Clemens J. M. Lasance notes that: "Although there is an analogy between heat flow by conduction (Fourier's law) and the flow of an electric current (Ohm’s law), the corresponding physical properties of thermal conductivity and electrical conductivity conspire to make the behavior of heat flow ...

  6. Thermal conduction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermal_conduction

    The heat flux density is the amount of energy that flows through a unit area per unit time. = ... Calculate the Biot number; Determine which relative depth matters, ...

  7. Heat flux measurements of thermal insulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heat_flux_measurements_of...

    On-site heat flux measurements are often focused on testing the thermal transport properties of for example pipes, tanks, ovens and boilers, by calculating the heat flux q or the apparent thermal conductivity. The real-time energy gain or loss is measured under pseudo steady state-conditions with minimal disturbance by a heat flux transducer ...

  8. Fay-Riddell equation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fay-Riddell_equation

    The Fay-Riddell equation is a fundamental relation in the fields of aerospace engineering and hypersonic flow, which provides a method to estimate the stagnation point heat transfer rate on a blunt body moving at hypersonic speeds in dissociated air. [1]

  9. Logarithmic mean temperature difference - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logarithmic_mean...

    Assume heat transfer [2] is occurring in a heat exchanger along an axis z, from generic coordinate A to B, between two fluids, identified as 1 and 2, whose temperatures along z are T 1 (z) and T 2 (z). The local exchanged heat flux at z is proportional to the temperature difference: