Help with Thermal Conductivity - Water vs. Air

AI Thread Summary
Water has a higher thermal conductivity than air, which is supported by various theoretical and experimental results. The discussion highlights that the density of water allows for more effective heat transfer due to closer molecular interactions. While some participants sought a formal proof, it was noted that such derivations are often unnecessary for practical understanding. The Prandtl number, which compares viscous to thermal diffusion, further illustrates the differences in heat conduction between the two substances. Ultimately, the consensus confirms that water is indeed a better thermal conductor than air.
quanchi
Messages
3
Reaction score
0
Help!

Which has higher heat conductivity: water or air?

And could you give me a proof as well?

Regards,
Quan Chi
 
Science news on Phys.org
quanchi said:
Which has higher heat conductivity: water or air?

Have you tried looking it up?

quanchi said:
And could you give me a proof as well?


Proof? Wouldn't this be an experimental result? Granted, it is probably possible for someone to use theoretical physics arguments to predict what the heat conductivity of a substance depends upon and therefore which one would be higher. But that would be a lot of work and would seem to be unecessary if you just want the answer.

EDIT: Unless somebody has asked YOU to provide such a derivation, in which case asking somebody else to do it for you is cheating.
 
Just an answer would be enough. I have tried looking it up without success so I thought I might just ask some professional help. I have no time to do a research and english is not my native language.
And the reason I am asking this question is a quarrel I had with my friends. I thought the correct answer was water but I could not prove it to them so easily.
 
Thank you very much :)
 
Just to throw a wrench in the works, the data is not corrected for density. For example, there are two ways to quantify viscosity- kinematic and dynamic- water and air have about the same dynamic viscosities.

The Prandtl number (ratio of viscous to thermal diffusion) does take this into account, and is about 0.7 for air and 7 for water.
 
If I were to explain why water is a better thermal conductor than air, I would say because liquid are denser than air (molecular distances are small) thus giving water more opportunity to contact with the heat source.

There are rarely proofs in physics theories, if any. But explanation like those can be taken as self-evident. And in some other cases, we can only feel confident about an explanation because it's grounded on suggestive evidence and logic that's been rigorously examined.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top