Title: RAD1.ppt Radiation Heat Transfer
1RAD1.ppt Radiation Heat Transfer
(Chapter in Outline Notes Radiation Heat
Transfer )
2Components of Course What Stage are We Up To?
- Types of exchangers, revision of OHTCs, fouling
factors. - Heat exchanger selection.
- Thermal performance analysis (NTUs) for co-
counter-current exchangers. - Multi-pass exchangers (ST).
- Condensation boiling.
- Radiation.
3Outline
- Key concepts (also in notes)
- Simple, two-surface, example (not in notes)
- Key points from three-surface example in lecture
notes
4What Types of Problems Can Be Answered at this
Stage?
- Furnace power requirements
- Making a solar absorber power requirements
- Temperatures of surfaces in ovens
- Distillation reboiler heating requirements by
radiation - Analysis of solar heating panels
5Examples in Outline Notes
- View factors examples 1,2,3
- Simple examples examples 4,5,6
- Two surfaces examples 7, 8
- Three surfaces example 9
(Chapter in Outline Notes Radiation Heat
Transfer )
6Key Concepts in Heat Transfer by Thermal Radiation
7Basic Considerations
- Thermal radiation
- 10-1 to 102 microns
- Surfaces emit, absorb, may transmit radiation
8Blackbody
- Theoretical concept, but useful in practice
- Gives estimate of maximum absorption and emission
for surface - Blackbody emissive power (W/m2) depends on
temperature (T) of surface
9From Whence Does Eb?T4 Come?
- Can plot Eb? monochromatic emissive power
spectral blackbody emissive power power at each
wavelength against wavelength - This relationship changes with temperature
- Curve gets higher, more power
- Peaks at lower wavelength, higher frequency (more
lower wavelengths at higher temperatures)
10- Integrating this over all wavelengths gives
Eb?T4
11Relevance?
- Driving forces Heat transfer by radiation is
driven by differences in emissive power
(proportional to T4), not just temperature
differences (convection conduction)
12Real Surfaces
13Real Surfaces
- At thermal equilibrium
- emissivity of surface absorptivity
- transmissivity of solid surfaces 0
- emissivity is the only significant parameter
- emissivities vary from 0.1 (polished surfaces) to
0.95 (blackboard)
14View Factors
- if I was walking around surface A1 and I looked
everywhere around me that I could, how much of my
view would surface A2 take up? - hence only part of radiation emitted by surface
A1 reaches surface A2 - assumes uniform intensity of radiation in all
directions (non-uniform intensity is beyond scope
of course)
15Complication
- In practice, we cannot just consider the
emissivity or absorptivity of surfaces in
isolation - Radiation bounces backwards and forwards between
surfaces - Use concept of radiosity (J) emissive power
for real surface, allowing for emissivity,
reflected radiation, etc
16All Real Surfaces are Grey
17Surface Resistance
18View Factor Resistance
19Relevance?
- Heat-transfer coefficients
- view factors (can surfaces see each other?
Radiation is line of sight ) - emissivities (can surface radiate easily? Shiny
surfaces cannot)
20Basic Concepts of Analysis
- Analogies with electrical circuit analysis
- Blackbody emissive power voltage
- Resistance resistance
- Heat-transfer rate current
21Simple Two-Surface Example
22Key Points for Two-Surface Example
- How to do view factor arithmetic
- How to use the concepts of view factors, surface
resistances and view factor resistances to solve
radiation problems - How to develop radiation networks
- Application storage of very cold (cryogenic)
fluids (e.g. N2), Q3, Tut 4
23Example What is the Nett Heat-Transfer Rate?
- Situation-
- hemisphere (surface 1), emissivity 0.1,
temperature 700 K, above - 1 m diameter disk (surface 2) , emissivity 0.5,
temperature 500 K
24Step 1 Sketch the Situation
25Step 2 Sketch Radiation Network
- Surface and view factor resistances important
- One surface resistance for each surface
- One view factor resistance if one surface can see
another
26(No Transcript)
27Step 3 View Factor Concept Ant on Surface
- Surface 1 (hemisphere)
- When looking towards surface 2 (disk), can see
both surfaces 1 and 2 (concave surface) - 0 lt F11 lt 1, 0 lt F12 lt 1
- Surface 2 (disk)
- When looking towards surface 1, hemisphere,
cannot see itself (flat or convex) - F22 0
28View Factor Arithmetic
- F21 1 - F22 1
- F12 A2 F21 / A1
- A1 1.571 m2 A2 0.785 m2
- F12 0.5
29Step 4 Evaluate Resistances
30Step 5 Evaluate Total Resistance
- Total resistance 5.7301.2731.273
- 8.28 m-2
31Step 6 Evaluate Emissive Powers ( Voltages)
- Hemisphere (surface 1) and disk (surface 2)
32Step 7 Evaluate Heat-Transfer Rate ( Current)
33Three-Surface Example
34Key Points for Three-Surface Example
- How to use standard view factor charts
- How to treat adiabatic ( well-insulated) walls
- Application performance analysis of solar energy
collectors
35Example
- Heating panels are located uniformly on the roof
of a furnace, which is being used to dry out a
bed of sand, which is situated on the floor. The
furnace is cubical in shape, with the sides being
1 m long.
36- The sand on the floor stays at a constant
temperature of 290K due to evaporation of
moisture. - The temperature of the panels is 800K.
- The emissivity of the heating panels is 0.9, and
that of the floor (sand) is 0.6. - How much energy needs to be supplied to the
panels to keep them at this temperature?
37Situation
38In What Context Might This Calculation Be Carried
Out?
- Suppose that you knew that the panels may burn
out due to overheating if the panel temperature
rises above 800K. - Such a burn out would mean replacing the panels
(expensive) and might also be a safety hazard
(possibility of fire).
39- You would want to limit the energy input,
because the panel temperature will rise as the
energy input increases if the floor temperature
stays the same. - This calculation would then tell you the critical
heat flux.
40- The insulation on the adiabatic walls will also
degrade, possibly with hazardous consequences, if
the wall temperature gets too high (say at 750
K). - We can also estimate the wall temperature.
41Interpretation
- All of the adiabatic walls see the same view of
the other walls, so they can all be treated as
one surface
42Treatment of Adiabatic Walls
- There is no heat flow through these walls (i.e.
no equivalent of current), so - The emissivity of these walls does not matter.
- The blackbody emissivity and the radiosity are
the same, so - The temperature can be estimated from the
radiosity. - These walls are just blank nodes in a radiation
network.
43General Procedure
- Draw up radiation network (always first)
- In any order
- calculate view factors, then view factor and
surface resistances, then total resistances - calculate blackbody emissive powers (voltages)
- Calculate heat flows
44Radiation Network
45Explanation of Radiation Network
- If a surface can see another surface, then there
must be a view factor resistance between the two
surfaces. - If the surface is not a blackbody, then it must
have a surface resistance. - For an adiabatic surface, the surface resistance
does not matter.
46(No Transcript)
47Evaluate View Factors
- Need to use symmetry as much as possible. Here
roof (surface 1) sees the same view of the walls
(surface 3) as the floor (surface 2), so F13
F23 - Need to use standard chart for F12 (roof-floor) -
eg chart in Hewitt et al Fig. 2.88, p. 138 - L, X, Y 1 m F12 0.23
48- F11 0 (flat surface cannot see itself)
- F11 F12 F13 1 (enclosed space)
- F13 1- F11 - F12 1 - 0 - 0.23 0.77
49Evaluate Resistances
50Evaluate Total Resistance
51Evaluate Emissive Powers
- Roof (surface 1) and floor (surface 2)
52Evaluate Heat Flow
53What Temperature are the Adiabatic Walls at the
Moment?
- Eb1, Eb2, J1, J2 and J3 all have units of W m-2
- There is no practical difference between the
radiosity (J3) and the blackbody emissive power
of the adiabatic walls. - If we know J3, then we can calculate T3 from-
54Find J1, J2
- Resistance from Eb1 to J1 0.111 m-2
- Resistance from J2 to Eb2 0.667 m-2
- Total resistance 2.404 m-2
- Total voltage drop 23224-401 22823 Wm-2
55J3
- The resistances 1/(A1F13) and 1/(A2F23) are
equal, so J3 is half way between J1 and J2 - J3 (222006730)/2 14450 Wm-2
56Conclusions for Example
- Maximum energy flux for panel temperature of 800
K 9.5 kW - Temperature of walls at this energy flux 711 K
(safe if maximum temperature is 750 K)
57Conclusions
- Basic mechanisms
- Radiation networks electrical analogies
- View factors
- View factor surface resistances
- Adiabatic walls
- Two and three-surface problems (examples)