asiga
Structural
- Sep 23, 2017
- 24
I've been told to assume that the U-value of air is 25 W/m2K. However, in other calculations I'm using the thermal diffusivity of the same volume of air (2.208*10-5 m2/s at 30ºC), and, since both values are related, I'd rather prefer to obtain the U-value from the thermal diffusivity, so that my calculations are coherent.
Given that the thermal diffusivity is alpha=lambda/(c*rho) , I can get the conductivity as lambda = alpha * rho * c = 2.208*10-5 m2/s * 1.1644 kg/m3 * 1005.7 J/kgK = 0.0258565 W/mK
And then, since U = lambda/thickness, I get U = 0.0258565 W/mK / 1m = 0.0258565 W/m2K
So, I'm getting "25" in the result, but divided 1/1000.
Going to the engineeringtoolbox website, it gives me 25.72 for conductivity of air at 30ºC
So, where's the catch?
Thanks a lot!!
Given that the thermal diffusivity is alpha=lambda/(c*rho) , I can get the conductivity as lambda = alpha * rho * c = 2.208*10-5 m2/s * 1.1644 kg/m3 * 1005.7 J/kgK = 0.0258565 W/mK
And then, since U = lambda/thickness, I get U = 0.0258565 W/mK / 1m = 0.0258565 W/m2K
So, I'm getting "25" in the result, but divided 1/1000.
Going to the engineeringtoolbox website, it gives me 25.72 for conductivity of air at 30ºC
So, where's the catch?
Thanks a lot!!