What is the final temperature of the air in a tube

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around determining the final temperature of air inside a copper tube that is partially exposed to air and partially embedded in the ground. Participants explore the impact of differing boundary temperatures, T2 for air and T3 for ground, on the equilibrium temperature, T1, inside the tube. There is debate on whether the problem has rotational symmetry due to the different temperature conditions, with suggestions to analyze the temperature changes in both halves of the tube separately. The complexity of the heat transfer analysis is acknowledged, with considerations for a potential temperature profile rather than a single temperature. Ultimately, the consensus is that a straightforward solution may not exist due to the varying thermal influences.
roldy
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Homework Statement


I have a copper tube with outer radius r2 and inner radius of r1. Half the tube is exposed to the surrounding air while the other half is embedded into the ground. The outside air temperature is T2 and the ground temperature is T3. What is the air temperature inside the tube , T1, after equilibrium is reached. This is not a homework assignment but more of a thought experiment.

Homework Equations


$$\dot{Q} \frac {T_1 - T_2}{R_{Total}}$$
$$\Delta T_{tube} = \dot{Q}R_{pipe}$$

3. The Attempt at a Solution [/B]

I was following along using the method described here https://www.engineersedge.com/heat_transfer/heat_loss_insulated_pipe_13865.htm. I then realized that the resistance of the ground needs to come into play. I'm not sure how to account for this since the problem is no longer symmetric about the axis. One possible way to solve this is to split the tube in half and solve for the temperature change in the top half and the temperature change in the bottom half. Then do another heat transfer analysis for the mixing of the two air "regions" to find the equilibrium temperature. Is this thinking correct? I can't recall from college heat transfer courses if I had such an example as this.
 
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roldy said:
This is not a homework assignment but more of a thought experiment
You still want a complete problem statement: I suppose the lower half of the tube is filled with air, not with Earth ?
What makes you write the problem is no longer symmetric about the axis ? There is rotational symmetry as far as I can follow the description ?
roldy said:
What is the air temperature inside the tube , T1, after equilibrium is reached.
What makes you think there is one single temperature and not a temperature profile ?
 
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BvU said:
You still want a complete problem statement: I suppose the lower half of the tube is filled with air, not with Earth ?
What makes you write the problem is no longer symmetric about the axis ? There is rotational symmetry as far as I can follow the description ?
What makes you think there is one single temperature and not a temperature profile ?

The whole tube is filled with air. The reason why I don't consider this problem symmetric is because of the 2 different temperature boundary conditions. After a long time, the inside of the tube should reach an equilibrium temperature.
 
Look at "figure" A and tell me If I understood the problem correctly.

Assuming that the temperature of the fluid inside the pipe is greater than the temperature of the surroundings, figure B should represent the temperature profile in the simpest case where outside the pipe there is only air with homogeneus properties. (The one I sketched is a radial temperature profile because cylindrical coordinates are easier to use in this case).
Case B is Simpler.

Figure C is What I think the Solution should look Like for your problem (Assuming the air is colder than the ground). I don't think there is a Simple Solution here...
IMG_20181204_154500.jpeg


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That's one way of having half a tube in the ground. And here's me thinking it is standing straight up :smile: !
 
I'm also guessing :wink::wink:
 
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