Conduction of Heat in Solids by H. S. Carslaw, J. C. Jaeger

Conduction of Heat in Solids



Download Conduction of Heat in Solids




Conduction of Heat in Solids H. S. Carslaw, J. C. Jaeger ebook
Page: 517
ISBN: 0198533683, 9780198533689
Format: djvu
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA


For conduction to work there needs to be physical contact between the two systems in question. Liquids: Most of the liquids transfer heat very well. Conduction usually can occur in solids such as various types of metal and glass. Conduction heat transfer is the heat transfer through medium without accompanied by displacement of the particle medium. And Jaeger, J.C., Conduction of Heat in Solids, 2nd ed., Clarendon Press, Oxford, England, section 3.3, p. When the heat transfer involves solids then we call it conduction. Transfer of heat in solids is by conduction. Conduction can simply be thought of as heat transfer by “touch”, and only can occur in matter (solids, liquids and gases). Thermal energy moves in three different ways: by conduction, convection and radiation. Such bad conductors of heat are called insulators. The concept of air sealing ties in with how insulation works and how heat moves. Transfer of heat within a fluid is by convection.

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