What is the temperature at the joint between the two rods?

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The discussion revolves around calculating the temperature at the joint between an aluminum rod and a brass rod, which are in thermal contact with one end at 0°C and the other at 200°C. Participants emphasize the importance of setting the heat flow rates equal for both materials due to their differing thermal conductivities, with aluminum being twice as conductive as brass. A participant initially misapplies the concept of thermal conductivity but later corrects their approach by using an energy balance equation to find the temperature at the joint. After recalculating with the correct thermal conductivity values, they arrive at a temperature of 133°C, which aligns with expectations based on the materials' properties. The conversation highlights the significance of understanding thermal conductivity in solving heat transfer problems.
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Homework Statement



The thermal conductivity of aluminum is twice that of brass. Two rods, one of
aluminum and the other of brass, are joined together end to end in excellent
thermal contact. They are of equal lengths and radii. The free end of the brass
rod is maintained at 0°C while the free end of the aluminum rod is kept at 200°C.
Under these conditions of steady heat flow, what is the temperature at the joint
between the two rods?



Homework Equations



Q/t = KA (T1-T2)/L


The Attempt at a Solution



I was thinking I had to set the rate of heat flow in the brass and aluminum to be equal and then isolate to find T1, but that turned out to be way wrong.

How should I start? I read a similar problem that said we should add the conductivities of the two metals. For example, conductivity of brass = x, conductivity of aluminum = 2x, therefore overall conductivity is 3x.
 
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I think your idea to set the heat flow rates to be equal is correct. I'm not sure why you got wrong answer. Did you notice that for the brass rod, T is the temperature of the hotter end and for the aluminum rod, it's that of the cooler end, where T is the temperature at the joint (and so, T is at the place of T1 for one rod but at the place of T2 for the other rod)?
I don't think adding thermal conductivities here is helpful.
 
mlostrac said:
I was thinking I had to set the rate of heat flow in the brass and aluminum to be equal and then isolate to find T1, but that turned out to be way wrong.

This sounds like solid reasoning. Where did it go wrong? Did you write a conduction equation for each metal and set them equal?

mlostrac said:
How should I start? I read a similar problem that said we should add the conductivities of the two metals. For example, conductivity of brass = x, conductivity of aluminum = 2x, therefore overall conductivity is 3x.

Not for two materials connected end to end.
 
K here's what I did:

[kA (T1-T2)]/L = [2kA (T1-T2)]/L

Since Areas and lengths are the same, the A's and L's cancel:

k(T1-T2) = 2k(T1-T2)
k(273 - T2) = 2k(473 - T2)

273k - KT2 = 946k - 2kT2
kT2 = 673k

T2 = 673 Kelvin or 400 degrees celsius

Which has got to be wrong because the original temp of the aluminum (the hotter material) is 200 degrees celsius

What do you think?
 
I don't know where the 2k came from; if aluminum has twice the thermal conductivity, why multiply it by two again? Try setting an energy balance: the heat flow coming in equals the heat flow going out.

Assume the aluminum rod is on the left, and the temperatures at measured at the left end, the midpoint, and right end (T_\mathrm{l}, T_\mathrm{m}, and T_\mathrm{r}). The heat flow is the positive x direction is always

-kA\frac{\Delta T}{\Delta x}=-k_\mathrm{Al}A\frac{T_\mathrm{m}-T_\mathrm{l}}{L}=-k_\mathrm{Br}A\frac{T_\mathrm{r}-T_\mathrm{m}}{L}

Try solving this.
 
Thermal conductivity of aluminum (2k) is 2 times that of brass (k). Thank you, I'll try now...
 
If a person with height X is twice as tall as a person with height Y, does Y = 2X?
 
OK, so I ended up getting 133 degrees celsius after using your equation which sounds like it could be right. I used the thermal conductivity values found in my text to plug into the following equation:

Tm = (Kal473 + Kbr273) / (Kal + Kbr)

* the numbers for Kal and Kbr were 200 and 100 respectively.

Look good?
 
That sounds better. It should make sense that if aluminum's thermal conductivity is higher, then the midpoint should be closer to the temperature at the end of the aluminum rod.
 
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Ok thank you for your help! Much appreciated
 
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