When raised to very high temperatures, many conven-tional | StudySoup

Textbook Solutions for Fundamentals of Heat and Mass Transfer

Chapter 3 Problem 3.23

Question

When raised to very high temperatures, many conven-tional liquid fuels dissociate into hydrogen and othercomponents. Thus the advantage of a solid oxide fuelcellis that such a device can internally reformreadilyavailable liquid fuels into hydrogen that can then beused to produce electrical power in a manner similar toExample 1.5. Consider a portable solid oxide fuel cell,operating at a temperature of Tfc?800C. The fuel cellis housed within a cylindrical canister of diameter D?75 mm and length L?120 mm. The outer surface ofthe canister is insulated with a low-thermal-conductivitymaterial. For a particular application, it is desired thatthe thermal signatureof the canister be small, to avoidits detection by infrared sensors. The degree to whichthe canister can be detected with an infrared sensor maybe estimated by equating the radiation heat flux emittedfrom the exterior surface of the canister (Equation 1.5;Es??s?Ts4) to the heat flux emitted from an equivalentblack surface, (Eb??Tb4). If the equivalent black sur-face temperature Tbis near the surroundings tempera-ture, the thermal signature of the canister is too small tobe detectedthe canister is indistinguishable from thesurroundings.(a) Determine the required thickness of insulation to beapplied to the cylindrical wall of the canister toensure that the canister does not become highly visi-ble to an infrared sensor (i.e., Tb?Tsur?5K).Consider cases where (i) the outer surface is cov-ered with a very thin layer of dirt (?s?0.90) and(ii) the outer surface is comprised of a very thinpolished aluminum sheet (?s?0.08). Calculate therequired thicknesses for two types of insulatingmaterial, calcium silicate (k?0.09 W/m?K) and aerogel (k?0.006 W/m?K). The temperatures ofthe surroundings and the ambient are Tsur?300 Kand T??298 K, respectively. The outer surface ischaracterized by a convective heat transfer coeffi-cient of h?12 W/m2?K.(b) Calculate the outer surface temperature of the can-ister for the four cases (high and low thermal con-ductivity; high and low surface emissivity).(c) Calculate the heat loss from the cylindrical walls ofthe canister for the four cases.

Solution

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The first step in solving 3 problem number 23 trying to solve the problem we have to refer to the textbook question: When raised to very high temperatures, many conven-tional liquid fuels dissociate into hydrogen and othercomponents. Thus the advantage of a solid oxide fuelcellis that such a device can internally reformreadilyavailable liquid fuels into hydrogen that can then beused to produce electrical power in a manner similar toExample 1.5. Consider a portable solid oxide fuel cell,operating at a temperature of Tfc?800C. The fuel cellis housed within a cylindrical canister of diameter D?75 mm and length L?120 mm. The outer surface ofthe canister is insulated with a low-thermal-conductivitymaterial. For a particular application, it is desired thatthe thermal signatureof the canister be small, to avoidits detection by infrared sensors. The degree to whichthe canister can be detected with an infrared sensor maybe estimated by equating the radiation heat flux emittedfrom the exterior surface of the canister (Equation 1.5;Es??s?Ts4) to the heat flux emitted from an equivalentblack surface, (Eb??Tb4). If the equivalent black sur-face temperature Tbis near the surroundings tempera-ture, the thermal signature of the canister is too small tobe detectedthe canister is indistinguishable from thesurroundings.(a) Determine the required thickness of insulation to beapplied to the cylindrical wall of the canister toensure that the canister does not become highly visi-ble to an infrared sensor (i.e., Tb?Tsur?5K).Consider cases where (i) the outer surface is cov-ered with a very thin layer of dirt (?s?0.90) and(ii) the outer surface is comprised of a very thinpolished aluminum sheet (?s?0.08). Calculate therequired thicknesses for two types of insulatingmaterial, calcium silicate (k?0.09 W/m?K) and aerogel (k?0.006 W/m?K). The temperatures ofthe surroundings and the ambient are Tsur?300 Kand T??298 K, respectively. The outer surface ischaracterized by a convective heat transfer coeffi-cient of h?12 W/m2?K.(b) Calculate the outer surface temperature of the can-ister for the four cases (high and low thermal con-ductivity; high and low surface emissivity).(c) Calculate the heat loss from the cylindrical walls ofthe canister for the four cases.
From the textbook chapter One-Dimensional, Steady-State Conduction you will find a few key concepts needed to solve this.

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Title Fundamentals of Heat and Mass Transfer 7 
Author Theodore L. Bergman; Adrienne S. Lavine; Frank P. Incropera; David P. DeWitt
ISBN 9780470501979

When raised to very high temperatures, many conven-tional

Chapter 3 textbook questions

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