Energy for heating the air to a specific temperature

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To heat air in an oven to a specific temperature, the specific heat of air, the volume of air, thermal conductance of the oven, and ambient temperature must be considered. The specific heat of air is approximately 1.026 kJ/(kg K), and for a volume of 64 m³, this results in needing about 10,506.24 kJ to reach 200°C from an ambient temperature of 40°C. The thermal conductance of the oven, measured in W/°K, is crucial for maintaining the desired temperature; for example, with a thermal conductance of 1 W/°K, 160 W would be needed to sustain 200°C. Accurate measurements and calculations of these parameters will guide the energy requirements for heating and maintaining the temperature. Further guidance on thermal conductance measurement was also provided.
MarianC
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Hi all. I'm trying to find haw much energy is required to get the air heated up to one desire temperature in oven. . I guess the next issue will be haw much energy is required to keep the temperature at the setting point.
A theoretic starting point will be useful from your side, if possible.
Thank you.
 
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You need to find out:
  1. The specific heat of air
  2. The volume of the air you want to heat
  3. The thermal conductance of the oven
  4. The ambient temperature
From there on, it's only plugging in numbers in formulas,
 
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Thank you for your advice. I will came back after measurements/calculations ( for 1-4 ) for the "data assembly" for the final scope: formulas for energy required.
 
I guess, if the calculation are correct :) that we are talking about:

The specific heat of air - 1.026 kJ/(kg K)

The volume of the air you want to heat - 64 m3
The thermal conductance of the oven -
upload_2015-5-29_14-13-59.png

upload_2015-5-29_14-13-31.png

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The ambient temperature 40+273K

I will appreciate your further guidance.
Thank you.
 
Adding in the specific mass of air ≈ 1kg/m3 gives you 64kg air to heat. Ignoring thermal leakage, this gives 64⋅1.026 kJ/°K from ambient So if you want the oven to reach 200°C, you will need 64⋅1.026⋅160 kJ = 10 506,24 kJ.

Thermal conductance: You have calculated a specific thermal conductance, but we need the inner surface of the oven to get ahead. The thermal conductance for the oven is given in W/°K and you would usually measure it by heating the oven to a given temperature and then turning off the power and measuring the temperature in the oven vs. time.

If your thermal conductance is 1W/°K and you want to keep the oven at 200°C (160°C over ambient), you need to supply 1W/°K⋅160°K = 160W.
 
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The heat capacity of the oven might be needed as well as it's thermal conductance.
 
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Svein said:
Adding in the specific mass of air ≈ 1kg/m3 gives you 64kg air to heat. Ignoring thermal leakage, this gives 64⋅1.026 kJ/°K from ambient So if you want the oven to reach 200°C, you will need 64⋅1.026⋅160 kJ = 10 506,24 kJ.

Thermal conductance: You have calculated a specific thermal conductance, but we need the inner surface of the oven to get ahead. The thermal conductance for the oven is given in W/°K and you would usually measure it by heating the oven to a given temperature and then turning off the power and measuring the temperature in the oven vs. time.

If your thermal conductance is 1W/°K and you want to keep the oven at 200°C (160°C over ambient), you need to supply 1W/°K⋅160°K = 160W.

Thank's a lot!
I got the idea, I think I can manage from this point.
 
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