Conduction heat transfer mechanisms

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on a heat conduction problem involving a rod with specified dimensions and temperature gradients. The user initially calculates the heat transfer in watts and attempts to find the material's thermal conductivity using the formula Q/dt=k(A/L)dT. However, they mistakenly calculate the surface area instead of the cross-sectional area, leading to an incorrect conclusion that the rod is made of ice. The correct approach requires using the cross-sectional area to accurately determine the material, which should yield a thermal conductivity value closer to that of iron. The error highlights the importance of using the correct area in heat transfer calculations.
Jennifer001
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1. Homework Statement [/b
the ends of a 20cm long,2cm diameter rod are maintained at 0degrees and 100degrees by immersion in an ice-water bath and boiling water. heat is conducted through the rod at 4.5x10^4J/h. of what material is the rod made?

Homework Equations



Q/dt=k(A/L)dT

The Attempt at a Solution



i first changed the heat energy conducted into watts which is = J/s

4.5x10^4J/h*1h/60min*1min/60s=12.5J/s

then i found the surface area of the rod

A=2(pi0.01^2)+(2pi0.01)0.2=0.01319m^2

now plug it into Q/dt=k(A/L)dT

12.5=k(0.01319)/0.2(100-0)
k=1.895

with this number i found that the rod is made of ice which has a k value of 1.7 (the closest number) but i checked the back and it suppose to be iron which has a k value of 80.. what did i do wrong?
 
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Your area is incorrect:
A in this equation is the cross sectional area of the conducting rod... not the entire surface area.
 
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