Heat Conduction through Carbon Steel Pipe

AI Thread Summary
To determine how far a carbon steel pipe heated to 1500°C cools to 790°C, one must consider both thermal conduction and convective heat transfer. The thermal conductivity of carbon steel is 54 W/mK, and the cooling process involves analyzing short segments of the pipe independently to find an equilibrium between heat loss and conduction. A suggested method is to create a spreadsheet that calculates the temperature drop across each segment based on the equations for conduction (q=-K(dT/dx)) and convection (q=hA(T1-T2)). The presence of insulation will increase the length of the pipe required to reach 790°C due to reduced heat loss. Understanding these principles allows for accurate calculations of temperature distribution along the pipe.
fujifilm6502002
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I am not sure how to approach this problem. If you have a carbon steel pipe that is being heated on one end at a constant temperature of 1500C. Can you figure out how much distance in pipe will it require before it cools to 790C? The thermal conductivity of Carbon steel is 54 W/mk. Another situation is what if there is insulations on top of the carbon steel, what will happen in that situation. I am pretty sure with insulation the length of the pipe will increase to reaches 790C.
 
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Hi fujifilm. The way I've done this in the past is to break up the pipe into short lengths and analyze each short length independently. There's convective heat transfer removing heat from the pipe and thermal conduction along the length. As heat is removed from convection, the pipe gets cooler. But the cooler it gets per unit length, the higher the thermal conduction. So there's an equilibrium between the two you're searching for.

Try setting up a spreadsheet where each row does the calculations for a very short section of pipe. Every row will be identical, and will be hinged on the previous row. Hope that makes sense.
 
I was wondering what do you mean break up the pipe into short length and analyze each short length mean? I was wondering what method did you use as in terms of equations and theory involved.
 
fujifilm6502002 said:
I was wondering what do you mean break up the pipe into short length and analyze each short length mean? I was wondering what method did you use as in terms of equations and theory involved.
Are you familiar with how to calculate heat transfer due to convection and conduction?
 
I am familiar with with heat transfer calculations by conduction and convection. I guess my confusion is to the assumption that should be made. In this problem I understand that the amount of energy transfer through the pipe using conduction is related to this equation where q=-K(dT/dx) and the equation for convection is q=hA(T1-T2). How can i apply these equations to calculate distance between two temperatures?
 
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