Title: Heat Transfer and Energy AOS 101
1Heat Transfer and Energy AOS 101
Section 302 Ross A. Lazear February 20, 2007
2Review
What is heat?
3Review
What is heat?
- Heat is energy in the process of being
transferred from one object to another because of
the temperature difference between them. - 2nd law of thermodynamics Heat is always
transferred from warm to cold objects so as to
warm the originally cooler object and cool the
originally warmer object. - Heat is measured in Joules.
4Review
- Two liters of boiling water has more heat
(energy) than one liter of boiling water - Heat will not flow between two objects of the
same temperature - The transfer of heat is always from a high
temperature object to a lower temperature object.
Heat transfer changes the internal energy of
both systems involved, as in the first law of
thermodynamics (conservation of energy).
5Specific Heat
- Specific heat Amount of heat energy required
to raise the temperature of 1 g of a substance 1
oC. - An object with a high specific heat is an object
that requires a large amount of heat energy in
order to change its temperature (an example of
this is water, with a specific heat of 1.00 cal
g-1 oC-1)
- A good example of this is a sand beach
http//outside.away.com/images/travel_photo_galler
y/tropical_escapes_ss/image1.jpg
6Review
Heat can be transferred by
7Review
Heat can be transferred by
- CONDUCTION
- CONVECTION
- ADVECTION
- RADIATION
8Conduction
- Transfer of heat through a material substance,
molecule by molecule - If you were to put a metal rod over a flame,
radiation from the flame will first transfer
energy from the flame to the rod.
- Then, the molecules in direct contact with the
flame will gain energy and vibrate faster
(remember the definition of temperature!) - The heated molecules will come in contact with
nearby molecules, and gradually spread the heat
through the material.
9Conduction
The measurement of how well (or how fast) a
material can transfer heat through conduction
depends on how the materials molecules are
structurally bounded together.
Substance Heat Conductivity (W/mK)
Still air at 20o C 0.023
Dry soil 0.25
Water at 20o C 0.6
Snow 0.63
Mud 2.1
Ice 2.1
Granite 2.7
Iron 80
Silver 427
10Conduction
- Air is a very poor conductor of heat, which is
why styrofoam cups are used to hold hot coffee. - In general, metals have very large
conductivities. Thus, when they are heated,
molecules will rapidly transfer heat through the
metal. - So, if air is such a poor conductor of heat, how
does the air in the lower atmosphere heat up so
quickly when the sun comes out in the morning?
11Convection
- Convection Heat transfer by the mass movement
of a fluid in the vertical, occurring in liquids
and gases (fluids). - Warm air is less dense than cold air at the same
atmospheric pressure (Ideal Gas Law!) - Think of cold air as being heavier. Thus, when
the Earths surface is heated by solar
(shortwave) radiation, heat conduction occurs.
The thin layer of air molecules at the Earths
surface is heated through conduction. This must
begin to rise, because warm air is less dense
than cold air. - Remember the Ideal Gas Law . . .
12Convection
- Pressure always decreases with increasing height
in the atmosphere - Recall, p rRT
- For a rising parcel of warm air, think of the
parcel as a balloon. - As the parcel rises, lower pressure will exert
less of a force on the parcels wall. This
will allow the parcel to expand, and the
temperature must then decrease. - Thus, a warm parcel will cool as it is lifted!
This parcel is then displaced by other
thermals. The process starts all over again,
and a convective circulation arises.
13Convection
- The cooling rate of a DRY thermal (the rising
portion of the convective circulation) can
actually be calculated
If a thermal consists of dry air, it will always
cool at a rate of . . .
9.8 oC/km
If a thermal is moist, the rate of cooling due to
ascent varies based on the amount of water vapor
the thermal contains (which depends on
temperature).
http//www.flyaboveall.com
14Convection
- This is the same process that produces fair
weather cumulus clouds and severe thunderstorms!
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cumulus_humilis
15Convection
Thanks to youtube, here are some great examples
of atmospheric convection
http//www.youtube.com/watch?v_cl0aw87LqA
http//www.youtube.com/watch?v1arvRoQBdWc
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vYXMVEpYRqyo
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vhV60nvuc7jc
16Advection
- The transfer of heat by wind
- The figure above demonstrates warm air
advection. - Warm air is being advected eastward by the
surface wind. - Over time, we expect the temperature to warm
over the trees.
17Advection
Locate regions of warm advection, cold advection,
and neutral advection
18Radiation
- Transferred through wave energy
Electromagnetic waves - Shorter wavelengths carry more energy than
longer wavelengths - The wavelengths of the radiation emitted by an
object depends on the temperature of that object
(i.e., the sun mainly emits radiative energy in
the visible spectrum, and the earth emits
radiative energy in the infrared spectrum).
19Radiation
- A photon of ultra-violet radiation carries more
energy than a photon of infrared radiation. - The shortest wavelengths in the visible spectrum
are purple, and the longest wavelengths are red.
20Radiation
- Emitted radiation can be
- Absorbed
- Increasing the internal energy of the gas
molecules. - Reflected
- Radiation is not absorbed or emitted from an
object but it reaches the object and is sent
back. The Albedo represents the reflectivity of
an object and describes the percentage of light
that is sent back. - Scattered
- Scattered light is deflected in all directions,
forward, backward, sideways. It is also called
diffused light. - Transmitted
- Radiation not absorbed, reflected, or scattered
by a gas, the radiation passes through the gas
unchanged.
21Summary