Coefficient of Thermal conductivity

AI Thread Summary
The coefficient of thermal conductivity (K) is crucial in calculating heat transfer, as represented by the equation Q = KA(t2-t1)/thickness. K varies with temperature, necessitating the use of tabulated values for accurate calculations. When T2 is 1020°C and T1 is 22°C, determining the appropriate K value is essential, especially if K is not constant within the temperature range. For materials with temperature-dependent properties, numerical methods are preferred for solving heat conduction problems. The integral form QΔx = -A∫(T1 to T2) k dT provides a more accurate approach when K is variable.
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K depends on temperature. K varies with temperature. For all the materials we have a tabular data of K for different temperatures.
While calculating Q for which temperature K value has to be taken?
Which K value is valid?
We know that,

Conduction Heat Transfer Q = KA(t2-t1)/thickness

K is the coefficient of thermal conductivity. If T2 = 1020°C and T1= 22°C also consider we know A and thickness value.

K depends on temperature. K varies with temperature. For all the materials we have a tabular data of K for different temperatures.
While calculating Q for which temperature K value has to be taken?
Which K value is valid?
 
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The equation Q = KA(t2-t1)/thickness is only valid in case the coefficient of thermal conductivity can be assumed to be about constant in the given temperature range.
 
If it is not constant, how to calculate it analytically?
Is there any other relation to calculate Q
 
Heat conduction problems with temperature dependent material properties are preferentially solved using numerical methods.
 
$$Q=-kA\frac{dT}{dx}$$so $$Q\Delta x=-A\int_{T_1}^{T_2}{kdT}$$
 
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