A heating element in a container with low pressure gas?

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In a closed container with a 500 W heating element at 2500 K and low-pressure ideal gas, the final temperature of the gas will exceed 2500 K if the heater remains on, as the first law of thermodynamics indicates that continuous energy input raises internal energy. The heating element's temperature must surpass that of the gas to transfer heat effectively, which raises concerns about the heater's durability since its melting point is also 2500 K. Discussions reference experiments at UW that achieve much higher temperatures, suggesting alternative heating methods like viscous heating from stirring could be necessary to reach temperatures around 30,000 K. The challenge lies in understanding how to maintain or exceed these temperatures without damaging the heating element. Overall, the dynamics of heat transfer and the limitations of the heating element are crucial to achieving the desired gas temperatures.
randombill
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This is just a qualitative question but feel free to show an equation if possible.

Basically if you have a container with a heating element, let's say 500 W with a temperature of 2500 Kelvins and inside this box is a low pressure ideal gas, something like 1/100 of an atmosphere. Also imagine that the walls of the container do not let heat escape. The question I have is what would be the final temperature of the low pressure gas (after a considerable time), higher than the temperature of the heating element at 2500 Kelvin or just the same. I'm assuming a Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution would describe the speeds of the particles and the temperature of a particle is (3/2)K_bT.
 
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What are your thoughts on this? Would the heater be left on after a long time, or shut off?

Chet
 
Chestermiller said:
What are your thoughts on this? Would the heater be left on after a long time, or shut off?

Chet
Let's imagine that the heater would only stay on at 2500k. The reason I ask this is because of the experiment at UW call the http://plasma.physics.wisc.edu/viewpage.php?id=mpdx experiment. They use LaB6 as the heating element with a max temperature around 2500k and in the Madison experiment they plan on heating Sodium to a temp much higher than that, like 30k Kelvin. I'm just not sure how that would be achieved?
 
randombill said:
Let's imagine that the heater would only stay on at 2500k. The reason I ask this is because of the experiment at UW call the http://plasma.physics.wisc.edu/viewpage.php?id=mpdx experiment. They use LaB6 as the heating element with a max temperature around 2500k and in the Madison experiment they plan on heating Sodium to a temp much higher than that, like 30k Kelvin. I'm just not sure how that would be achieved?
What do you think would happen with the heating element if you kept it on at 500 W after the temperature in the chamber reached 2500 K?

Chet
 
Chestermiller said:
What do you think would happen with the heating element if you kept it on at 500 W after the temperature in the chamber reached 2500 K?

Chet
My guess is the heater would stay at whatever temp that's equivalent to 500 w and the gas in the container would start to go above 2500 kelvin, but I'm sort of lost as to how to explain this using only convection; the average electron temps would definitely increase over 2500k.
 
randombill said:
My guess is the heater would stay at whatever temp that's equivalent to 500 w and the gas in the container would start to go above 2500 kelvin, but I'm sort of lost as to how to explain this using only convection; the average electron temps would definitely increase over 2500k.
The first law of thermodynamics tells me that if you keep supplying thermal energy via the heating element (electrical energy being converted to heat), and since the container is rigid so no work is being exchanged with the surroundings, the internal energy of the container contents will keep rising. In order for the heating element to supply heat to the gas, its temperature must be higher than the gas. So, if you keep supplying 500 W to the heating element, its temperature will rise above 2500. (What made you think that it wouldn't?). How much higher its temperature can get before burning out is what needs to be addressed.

Chet
 
Chestermiller said:
The first law of thermodynamics tells me that if you keep supplying thermal energy via the heating element (electrical energy being converted to heat), and since the container is rigid so no work is being exchanged with the surroundings, the internal energy of the container contents will keep rising. In order for the heating element to supply heat to the gas, its temperature must be higher than the gas. So, if you keep supplying 500 W to the heating element, its temperature will rise above 2500. (What made you think that it wouldn't?). How much higher its temperature can get before burning out is what needs to be addressed.

Chet
I don't disagree with your statement, the last part.

"How much higher its temperature can get before burning out is what needs to be addressed."

Is what I'm confused by simply from the standpoint that the melting point of the heater is 2500 Kelvin, therefore the gas around the element shouldn't ever reach anything above that, yet they're supposedly getting 30k Kelvin just by stirring the plasma? I'm confused now.
 
randombill said:
I don't disagree with your statement, the last part.

"How much higher its temperature can get before burning out is what needs to be addressed."

Is what I'm confused by simply from the standpoint that the melting point of the heater is 2500 Kelvin, therefore the gas around the element shouldn't ever reach anything above that, yet they're supposedly getting 30k Kelvin just by stirring the plasma? I'm confused now.
Well, the heater is not going to be able to do it, so something else must supply the required energy. Maybe viscous heating from the stirring could do the trick, but it might take a long time (if the stirrer is magnetic so that heat couldn't be conducted out along the shaft).

Chet
 
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