Heat Transfer and -Capacity
Heat transfer and heat capacity modeling should be addressed here.
I would like to show some helpful information here, esp. some interesting numbers for nice materials, like the best and
the worst heat transfering materials, typical airospace materials, and so on.
When studying the material, you will see, that *diamonds* are by far the most valuable material in this context...
So the ultimate heatshield would consist of pure diamonds.....
After that a few thoughts about how we could model all this.
I link two pictures of the validation model I made in Matlab/Simulink :
Model Top-View
Simulation Result
Material constants
Specific heat capacity (c_p) [J/(kg K)]
--------------------------------------------------
Hydrogen : 14300
Helium : 5190
*Diamond* : 5000
Water : 4180
Ethanol, Glycerin : 2430
Methane : 2160
Water vapor (@100°C) : 2080
Water ice (@0°C) : 2060
Wood ˜ : 1700
Butane : 1660
Air (dry) : 1010
Aluminium : 896
Concrete : 880
Carbondioxid : 846
Glas : 670 – 840
Argon : 523
Iron : 450 – 550
Steel : 500
Copper : 382
Silver : 235
Mercury : 139
Lead : 129
Melting temperatures (@1.013 bar) [K]
-----------------------------------------------
*Diamond* : > 4500
Tantalum hafnium carbide : 4488
Tungsten : 3695 (Wolfram)
Titanium : 1941 (boiling: 3533)
Iron : 1809
Silicon : 1683
Steel : 1670
Copper : 1357
Gold : 1337.33 (boiling: 3243)
Silver : 1234.93 (boiling: 2483)
Aluminium : 933.48
Magnesium : 923
Lead : 600.61 (boiling: 2022)
PUR(Polyurethane) : 533.65
Sodium : 370.87 (boiling: 1156)
Gallium : 302.9146
Water : 273.15
Mercury : 234.43 (boiling: 629.88)
Nitrogen : 63.15 (boiling: 77.36)
Oxygen : 54.36 (boiling: 90.20)
Hydrogen : 14.01 (boiling: 20.28)
Helium : 0.0001785 (boiling: 4.22)
Typical connection heat transfer coefficients (alpha) [W/(m^2 K)]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Still Air -> Wall : 8
Stormy Air -> Wall : 290
Still Water -> Tank : 580 - 2300
Slow cool Water -> Pipe : 2300
Fast boiling Water -> Pipe : 12000
Condensing water vapor -> Wall : 6000 - 12000
=> you see, take what you want.
Mass densities [kg/m^3]
-----------------------
Hydrogen : 0.0898
Helium : 0.179
Aerogel : 1.0
Air : 1.2 // At sea level
Tungsten hexafluoride (g) : 12.4 // One of the heaviest known gases
Liquid hydrogen : 70 // At approximately -255 °C
Cork : 240
Lithium : 535 // Least dense metal
Wood : 700
Ice : 916.7 // At temperature < 0 °C
Sodium : 970
Water (fresh) : 1000 // Maximum, occurs at approximately 4 °C
Liquid oxygen : 1141 // At approximately -219 °C
Nylon : 1150
Plastics : 1175 // Approximate;for polypropylene, PETE/PVC
Glycerol : 1261
Sand : 1600 // Between 1600 and 2000
Magnesium : 1740
Silicon : 2330
Concrete : 2400
Glass : 2500
Quartzite : 2600
Granite : 2700
Aluminium : 2700
*Diamond* : 3500
Titanium : 4540
Vanadium : 6100
Zinc : 7000
Chromium : 7200
Tin : 7310
Steel : 7850
Iron : 7870
Copper : 8940
Silver : 10500
Lead : 11340
Mercury : 13546
Uranium : 19100
Tungsten : 19300
Gold : 19320
Platinum : 21450
Iridium : 22420
Osmium : 22570 // Densest natural element on Earth
Modeling heat bodies
- Each heat body consists of two parts: surface zone and inside zone
- Surface and Inside have the same heat capacity C (we can discuss this)
- Surface and Inside have different temperatures Ts and Ti when not in equilibrium
- Surface and Inside are insulated to each other but always connected together
- Parts of the Surface can be connected to different other Surfaces or vacuum
- Each of these connections lead to a different heatflow to the Surface
- Heatflow to the Inside can only occur due to temperature difference to Surface
- Surface connection to vacuum yields to black body radiation as a heatsink
- Surface connection to atmosphere yields to frictional heat flow into the Surface
- Surface connection to a different Surface of another heat body leads to heat exchange between the Surfaces
- Heat transfer is linear and calculated by the means of heat transfer coefficients
<to be continued>
Heat transfer and heat capacity modeling should be addressed here.
I would like to show some helpful information here, esp. some interesting numbers for nice materials, like the best and
the worst heat transfering materials, typical airospace materials, and so on.
When studying the material, you will see, that *diamonds* are by far the most valuable material in this context...
So the ultimate heatshield would consist of pure diamonds.....
After that a few thoughts about how we could model all this.
I link two pictures of the validation model I made in Matlab/Simulink :
Model Top-View
Simulation Result
Material constants
Specific heat capacity (c_p) [J/(kg K)]
--------------------------------------------------
Hydrogen : 14300
Helium : 5190
*Diamond* : 5000
Water : 4180
Ethanol, Glycerin : 2430
Methane : 2160
Water vapor (@100°C) : 2080
Water ice (@0°C) : 2060
Wood ˜ : 1700
Butane : 1660
Air (dry) : 1010
Aluminium : 896
Concrete : 880
Carbondioxid : 846
Glas : 670 – 840
Argon : 523
Iron : 450 – 550
Steel : 500
Copper : 382
Silver : 235
Mercury : 139
Lead : 129
Melting temperatures (@1.013 bar) [K]
-----------------------------------------------
*Diamond* : > 4500
Tantalum hafnium carbide : 4488
Tungsten : 3695 (Wolfram)
Titanium : 1941 (boiling: 3533)
Iron : 1809
Silicon : 1683
Steel : 1670
Copper : 1357
Gold : 1337.33 (boiling: 3243)
Silver : 1234.93 (boiling: 2483)
Aluminium : 933.48
Magnesium : 923
Lead : 600.61 (boiling: 2022)
PUR(Polyurethane) : 533.65
Sodium : 370.87 (boiling: 1156)
Gallium : 302.9146
Water : 273.15
Mercury : 234.43 (boiling: 629.88)
Nitrogen : 63.15 (boiling: 77.36)
Oxygen : 54.36 (boiling: 90.20)
Hydrogen : 14.01 (boiling: 20.28)
Helium : 0.0001785 (boiling: 4.22)
Typical connection heat transfer coefficients (alpha) [W/(m^2 K)]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Still Air -> Wall : 8
Stormy Air -> Wall : 290
Still Water -> Tank : 580 - 2300
Slow cool Water -> Pipe : 2300
Fast boiling Water -> Pipe : 12000
Condensing water vapor -> Wall : 6000 - 12000
=> you see, take what you want.
Mass densities [kg/m^3]
-----------------------
Hydrogen : 0.0898
Helium : 0.179
Aerogel : 1.0
Air : 1.2 // At sea level
Tungsten hexafluoride (g) : 12.4 // One of the heaviest known gases
Liquid hydrogen : 70 // At approximately -255 °C
Cork : 240
Lithium : 535 // Least dense metal
Wood : 700
Ice : 916.7 // At temperature < 0 °C
Sodium : 970
Water (fresh) : 1000 // Maximum, occurs at approximately 4 °C
Liquid oxygen : 1141 // At approximately -219 °C
Nylon : 1150
Plastics : 1175 // Approximate;for polypropylene, PETE/PVC
Glycerol : 1261
Sand : 1600 // Between 1600 and 2000
Magnesium : 1740
Silicon : 2330
Concrete : 2400
Glass : 2500
Quartzite : 2600
Granite : 2700
Aluminium : 2700
*Diamond* : 3500
Titanium : 4540
Vanadium : 6100
Zinc : 7000
Chromium : 7200
Tin : 7310
Steel : 7850
Iron : 7870
Copper : 8940
Silver : 10500
Lead : 11340
Mercury : 13546
Uranium : 19100
Tungsten : 19300
Gold : 19320
Platinum : 21450
Iridium : 22420
Osmium : 22570 // Densest natural element on Earth
Modeling heat bodies
- Each heat body consists of two parts: surface zone and inside zone
- Surface and Inside have the same heat capacity C (we can discuss this)
- Surface and Inside have different temperatures Ts and Ti when not in equilibrium
- Surface and Inside are insulated to each other but always connected together
- Parts of the Surface can be connected to different other Surfaces or vacuum
- Each of these connections lead to a different heatflow to the Surface
- Heatflow to the Inside can only occur due to temperature difference to Surface
- Surface connection to vacuum yields to black body radiation as a heatsink
- Surface connection to atmosphere yields to frictional heat flow into the Surface
- Surface connection to a different Surface of another heat body leads to heat exchange between the Surfaces
- Heat transfer is linear and calculated by the means of heat transfer coefficients
<to be continued>
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