WARose
Structural
- Mar 17, 2011
- 5,594
I have a thermo problem here....for a mechanical guy this is probably pretty easy, but for a structural guy like me....I am struggling (first time I've opened a thermo book in about 20 years). The problem is this: how thick does a concrete wall have to be (on a per square foot basis) to facilitate a 104 degree (Fahrenheit) drop?
One way I tried to do it is to relate specific heat for material to the conduction equation. Specifically I set it up this way:
Q=M*Cp*Delta(T)=Delta(T)/(X/Ck*A)
Where:
M=mass (lbm); Concrete is about 150 lbs/cubic foot. I got mass by dividing by 32.2. I included X (see below) in this calculation.
Cp=Specific Heat (I used 0.2 BTU/lbm*F)
Delta(T)=104 F
X=Thickness of the wall (in feet)
Ck=1.0 BTU/h*ft*F
A= 1 ft^2
Plugging these values in....I get:
4.65X*(0.201)*104=104/X; solving for X I get 1.03' of thickness which doesn't seem right.
Looking at the units, the Ck variable includes a time element which I do not consider here (I was looking at it as a steady-state problem).
Could someone backcheck me here? Does what I am doing make sense? Thanks in advance.
One way I tried to do it is to relate specific heat for material to the conduction equation. Specifically I set it up this way:
Q=M*Cp*Delta(T)=Delta(T)/(X/Ck*A)
Where:
M=mass (lbm); Concrete is about 150 lbs/cubic foot. I got mass by dividing by 32.2. I included X (see below) in this calculation.
Cp=Specific Heat (I used 0.2 BTU/lbm*F)
Delta(T)=104 F
X=Thickness of the wall (in feet)
Ck=1.0 BTU/h*ft*F
A= 1 ft^2
Plugging these values in....I get:
4.65X*(0.201)*104=104/X; solving for X I get 1.03' of thickness which doesn't seem right.
Looking at the units, the Ck variable includes a time element which I do not consider here (I was looking at it as a steady-state problem).
Could someone backcheck me here? Does what I am doing make sense? Thanks in advance.