How Do You Calculate Pipe Temperature with Uniform Heating Over Length?

AI Thread Summary
To calculate the temperature along a pipe with uniform heating, the initial conditions include water at 20°C and 8 bar pressure entering a 0.2 cm diameter pipe, heated at 5.0 kW/m² over a length of 20 m with a mass flow rate of 0.5 kg/s. The energy balance equation is applied, leading to a linear temperature distribution along the pipe. However, the problem may be overspecified due to the conflicting mass flow rate and pressure drop, necessitating an assessment of flow type by calculating the Reynolds number. Depending on whether the flow is laminar or turbulent, different equations for heat transfer will apply, as referenced in Bird, Stewart, and Lightfoot's work. Accurate temperature calculations require clarifying these flow characteristics.
wasaimal
Messages
3
Reaction score
0
is anyone help to solve this problem?

Water at a temperature of 20degree C and a pressure 8 bar enters a pipe of dia.0.2 cm.The Pipe uniformly heated with 5.0kW/m². Calculate the Temperature along the pipe for the pipe length of 20m. plot temperatuer as a function of the pipe length. m=0.5 kg/s

wasaimal@hotmail.com
 
Engineering news on Phys.org


This is obviously homework, what are your thoughts on how it needs to be solved?
 


I have no clue
 


Given
T_in = 20 C^0 Heat Flux = 5.0 kW/m^2
D = 0.2 cm X = Length = 20 m
Pressure = 8 bar Area = (πD^2)/4 = (3.14〖(0.002)〗^2)/4 = 3.14E-〖10〗^6 〖 m〗^2
Calculate
Calculate the Temperature along the pipe for the pipe length.
Plot Temperature as a function of the pipe length.
Energy balanced equation is valid for ant pipe length.
q’ (X) = m ̇ C_p (T_x - T_in)
T_x = T_in + (q’)/(mC_p ) ̇ X
= 20 + 0.0157/(0.5)4180 X = 20 + 7.511E-〖10〗^6 X (It’s a linear distribution along the pipe).

any one check and if i am on correct path?
 
wasaimal said:
is anyone help to solve this problem?

Water at a temperature of 20degree C and a pressure 8 bar enters a pipe of dia.0.2 cm.The Pipe uniformly heated with 5.0kW/m². Calculate the Temperature along the pipe for the pipe length of 20m. plot temperatuer as a function of the pipe length. m=0.5 kg/s

wasaimal@hotmail.com

It looks like the problem is overspecified. You can't specify the mass flow rate if you give the pressure drop (presumably 7 bars).

You first need to get a handle on whether the flow is turbulent or laminar by approximating the Reynolds number. If the flow is laminar, Bird, Stewart, and Lightfoot gives the solution for constant flux laminar flow heating of fluid flow in a tube. If the flow is turbulent, they give the equation for the Nussult Number (dimensionless heat transfer coefficient) as a function of the Reynolds Number and Prantdl number.
 
Thread 'Where is my curb stop?'
My water meter is submerged under water for about 95% of the year. Today I took a photograph of the inside of my water meter box because today is one of the rare days that my water meter is not submerged in water. Here is the photograph that I took of my water meter with the cover on: Here is a photograph I took of my water meter with the cover off: I edited the photograph to draw a red circle around a knob on my water meter. Is that knob that I drew a red circle around my meter...
Hi all, i have some questions about the tesla turbine: is a tesla turbine more efficient than a steam engine or a stirling engine ? about the discs of the tesla turbine warping because of the high speed rotations; does running the engine on a lower speed solve that or will the discs warp anyway after time ? what is the difference in efficiency between the tesla turbine running at high speed and running it at a lower speed ( as fast as possible but low enough to not warp de discs) and: i...
Back
Top