Title: Fysische transportverschijnselen I125practicum
1Fysische transport-verschijnselenI125-practicum
- Fase-verandering en Warmte-overdracht
- Acad. Jaar 2003-2004
- Eerste ingenieursjaar Bio-ingenieur
2Phase Change Heat Transfer -
- Why Freezing?
- Dont care if its alive or dead - Food
processing, 7-8 of all foods, 15 billion
industry. - Kill - destruction of undesired tissue
- Bring back to life later -Cryopreservation
- Cryosurgery advantages
- Low bleeding
- Good aesthetic results
- Minimal use of anesthetics
- Short period of recovery
- Low cost
3Freezing and Thawing
- Freezing of pure water
- Freezing process
- Property changes
- Freezing of solutions and biomaterials
- Temperature profiles and freezing time
- Biomaterials, considering mushy region
- Biomaterials, approx. soln. for pure liquid
4Change in properties during freezing
- Density ?
- Thermal conductivity
- Specific heat
- Dielectric loss
- Thermal diffusivity
- Youngs Modulus
5Freezing makes a biomaterial harder and brittle
1
4
0
0
1
2
0
0
Young's
1
0
0
0
Modulus
(MPa)
8
0
0
6
0
0
4
0
0
2
0
0
0
-
5
0
-
4
0
-
3
0
-
2
0
-
1
0
0
Temperature (C)
6Penetration of freezing front
- Assumptions
- unfrozen part at freezing temperature Tm
- frozen part in pseudo-steady state with constant
thermal conductivity and approximately a linear
T-gradient - sharp freezing front
7Principles of simple equation
- Heat transfer in frozen layer
- pseudo-steady state
- approximately linear gradient and a
- constant thermal conductivity
- Latent heat of fusion at freezing front
8By integration final equation
With prescribed surface temperature Ts
With convection b.c. (T? and h)
9Latent heat
- Biomaterials and soils
- water has the most important latent heat so
- with ? the latent heat (333 kJ/kg for water)
- and (mf) the mass fraction of water in the
material (bio- or soil)
10Problem Hamburger freezing
Datta, 2002 pag 143)
11Problem frost penetration in soil
(Datta, 2002 pag 144)
12Fysische transport-verschijnselenI125-practicum
- Warmte-overdracht
- door straling
- Acad. Jaar 2003-2004
- Eerste ingenieursjaar Bio-ingenieur
13Electromagnetic Radiation
- No medium required for transmission
- Magnitude of radiation depends on temperature
level - Quality of radiation depends on temperature
level - Speed is that of light (3108 m/s)
- Thermal radiation is 0.1-100 microns, this
includes Infared - Visible (0.38-0.76 microns)
14Wave Hitting a Surface -
Reflected
Incident
a b
Surface
ab, specular a?b, diffuse
Absorbed
Transmitted
15Albedo
Albedo Fraction of radiation reflected from soil
Zie fig 8.7 in Datta, 2002 pag 150
dry
Vegetation (0.25)
Water (0.05/loodrecht)
wet
- Important for energy balance of the soil/
- vegetation
16Emissivity
Zie fig 8.13 in Datta, 2002 pag 156
- E ? Eb (0 lt? lt1)
- When ? lt 1, it is called a gray surface.
- All real surfaces are gray
- Emissivity varies with
- Surface condition
- Direction
- Temperature
Emissive power (real body)
Emissivity
Emissive power (black body)
Water hoge emissiviteit
Aluminium lage emissiviteit
17How much radiation can be incident on Earth?
Energy conservation gives
18Radiative exchange
- Configuration or View Factor (F1-2) is defined
as F1-2 Fraction of the radiation leaving
surface 1 which is intercepted by surface 2. - Net exchange between two black bodies is q1-2
A1 F1-2 ? (T14 - T24) - Net exchange between one surface and other black
surfaces in an enclosure is - q1 ?Ai Fi-j ? (Ti4 - Tj4)
- Net exchange between two surfaces in a two
surface enclosure (gray surfaces) is
19Concept viewfactor
20View factor between aligned flat surfaces
21ProblemSunbathing
?
emissivity
22Absorption and transmission in biomaterials
Biomaterial Slab
F0
FF0e-x/?
F
x
?
63 of the energy has been absorbed in the
distance x ?.
- ? measures how good the absorption is...
- Infared few microns
- Microwave few centimeters
- Radio Frequency hundreds of centimeters
23Radiation
- Solar Radiation
- Behaves like an ideal body at 5800 K
- Water vapor absorbs at longer wavelengths
(infared) - Ozone absorbs in ultraviolet
Earths Surface Radiation Eearth ?earth ?
T4earths surface ?earth 1 for water,
vegetation Tearths surface 14C
Radiation from outside atmosphere into
space Teffective (as seen from space)
-18C Thus, heat is trapped by the atmosphere
24Spectral distribution of solar radiation
25Atmospheric Emissions
- H2O, CO2 in atmosphere emit radiation
- It is the only source of radiation at night
Vapor pressure at 1.5 m above ground
26Radiation exchange of a leaf with the sky and
ground
27Problem 8.12.9
Datta, 2002 pag 170
28Problem Datta 8.12.6 (human radiation
(Datta, 2002, pag 170)
Ommit wavelength parts !!!!!