Interior temperature of a solar collector

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the interior temperature of a solar collector with a collecting area of 12 m², receiving 300 W/m² of solar power on a cold day with an outside temperature of -20°C. The formula used is P = s A e (T^4 - To^4), where the user struggles to arrive at the expected temperature of 38°C, consistently obtaining -13°C instead. Other participants confirm that their calculations yield a temperature close to 38.2°C, suggesting the original poster may have made a mistake in their calculations or order of operations. The importance of properly accounting for the area in the calculations is highlighted. The thread emphasizes the need for careful attention to detail in applying mathematical formulas.
imatreyu
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Homework Statement



A solar collector has an effective collecting area of 12 m^2. The collector is thermally insulated, and so conduction is negligible in comparison with radiation. On a cold but sunny winter's day the temperature outside is -20.0 C, and the Sun irradiates the collector with a power per unit area of 300 W/m^2. Treating the collector as a black body (i.e., emissivity = 1.0), determine its interior temperature after the collector has achieved a steady-state condition (radiating energy as fast as it is received).


Homework Equations



I used P = s A e (T^4 - To^4)


The Attempt at a Solution




300 = (5.66 x 10^-8)(12)(T^4 - 253.15^4)


The answer should be 38 C, according to the book, but I don't get that at all when I solve for T. . .I keep getting -13 C. What am I doing wrong?
 
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imatreyu said:
I used P = s A e (T^4 - To^4)


The Attempt at a Solution




300 = (5.66 x 10^-8)(12)(T^4 - 253.15^4)


The answer should be 38 C, according to the book, but I don't get that at all when I solve for T. . .I keep getting -13 C. What am I doing wrong?

The numbers look okay. When I solve the equation for T and plug in the given numbers I get 38.2 C. Must be a finger issue. :smile:
 
Darn. .. I keep getting -13. Maybe I need to review basic order of operations. . .
 
Oh! Why do I ignore the area?
 
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