Heat Transfer -- Newton's law of cooling

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the setup of a temperature distribution model involving three bodies, where Body A starts at 115°C and is cooled by Bodies B and C, which are maintained at a constant 15°C. The user expresses dissatisfaction with their results and seeks validation of their assumptions, particularly regarding uniform temperature distribution and the neglect of heat conduction within Bodies B and C. Responses highlight the importance of correctly applying heat transfer coefficients and the transient heat conduction equation for accurate modeling. The conversation emphasizes the need for clarity on boundary conditions and the role of heat conduction in the system.
Fritiofmikael
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Hi,

I have been trying to set up a funtcion of the temperature over time and I am doubting my results.

In the system i have:
upload_2018-9-28_9-44-3.png

Fig 1.

The system is at rest. For simplicty I've considerd the ambient temperature to be same as T1.

By knowing:

upload_2018-9-28_9-55-36.png

Fig 2.

yeilds:

upload_2018-9-28_9-57-23.png

Fig 3.

In my case B&C is at a constant Temperature of 15°C and Body A 115°C.

The specific heat cond and heat transfer coeff for A is:
0,19 W/m
1700 J/kg

For A:
Length = 2.41m
Width = 2.071m
Depth = 0.01m
Density = 950 kg/m3For Fig3. i end up with L=0.01m A=0.0207m2 and m = 47.4 kg.

By using the function above and plotting over 60 sec i get.
upload_2018-9-28_10-9-41.png

Fig 4

I'm not satisfied with my end result and wondering if anyone can see if there are any obvious errors?

Best Regards

Mikael
 

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Fritiofmikael said:
In my case B&C is at a constant Temperature of 15°C and Body A 115°C.

I'm not quite sure, how your model looks like. Are you trying to find the temperature distribution of your setup or just the transferred heat, i.e. do you assume that all the bodies (A, B, C) have a uniform tempeature at each time? Then what's your length ##L##? Do the bodies B and C are the boundaries (and therefore have the same temperature during your entire calculation)?

Also there are some issues with your units, the conductivity is in ##W/mK## and the heat transfer coefficient in ##W/m^2K##.

One last question: Is this kind of a homework or how did you come up with this scenario?
 
Thank you for your reply.

Yes I assume that the system has a uniform temperature distrubtion.

I want to find the temperature distribution of body A with an initial temp is 115 C. My length is 0.01m. B & C have a constant temp at 15 which can be considered as the boundaries.
 
Are the temperatures of bodies B and C changing with time? Do you think it is valid to neglect heat conduction within the bodies, and to only use a heat transfer coefficient at their boundaries...or would it be more accurate to assume that heat conduction is occurring and that there is no resistance to heat transfer at the boundaries?
 
@Chestermiller

Thank you for the reply,

There is a heat conduction in the system.

No more heat is generated into body A

Bodies B & C are actively cooling body A with a set point of 15 degrees Celsius. There will be heat conducted to B & C but one can consider that change to negligible.
 
Fritiofmikael said:
@Chestermiller

Thank you for the reply,

There is a heat conduction in the system.

No more heat is generated into body A

Bodies B & C are actively cooling body A with a set point of 15 degrees Celsius. There will be heat conducted to B & C but one can consider that change to negligible.

Are the boundaries and the temperature distribution of the Body A you want to assume like in the atttached schematic (for a specific time)?
 

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@stockzahn

Thank you for your reply,

There are no boundaries of body A, yes that is my assumption.
 
Fritiofmikael said:
@Chestermiller

Thank you for the reply,

There is a heat conduction in the system.

No more heat is generated into body A

Bodies B & C are actively cooling body A with a set point of 15 degrees Celsius. There will be heat conducted to B & C but one can consider that change to negligible.
So, if you are including heat conduction, then are you solving the transient heat conduction equation within body A:
$$\rho C\frac{\partial T}{\partial t}=k\frac{\partial ^2 T}{\partial y^2}$$
where ##\rho## is the density of body A, C is its heat capacity, k is its thermal conductivity, and y is vertical position?
 
Fritiofmikael said:
@stockzahn

Thank you for your reply,

There are no boundaries of body A, yes that is my assumption.

If the temperature of the bodies B and C is constant you can assume them to be a boundary with ##T= const.## (a so-called Dirichlet boundary condition). You don't need to model them. So to be sure the only temperature changing (only in time) is the temperature of body A?
 
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