Heat Conduction in Engineering: Explaining the Physics

AI Thread Summary
Heat conduction is a process where thermal energy transfers from a hotter material to a cooler one through direct contact of particles. A common example is a metal spoon in a hot cup of tea, where heat moves from the tea to the spoon, causing the spoon to heat up and transmit warmth to the user's fingertips. Metals are effective conductors due to their closely packed particles and free electrons that facilitate rapid energy transfer. The discussion encourages identifying engineering systems, like solar water heaters, that rely on conduction, emphasizing the necessity of specifying the conduction pathways. Understanding these principles is crucial for demonstrating the importance of conduction in practical applications.
dado1307
Messages
7
Reaction score
0
Describe the physics behind an engineering system where heat conduction phenomena
plays an important role. (a familiar system)
 
Physics news on Phys.org
And your thoughts are ... ?
 
I've tried it but i don't think its an engineering system...

Thermal energy flows from a material at a higher temperature to a material at a lower temperature. This general process is called heat transfer. Conduction is the transfer of heat energy by which moving particles make other particles move by the direct contact of particles of matter. Conduction can also occur through the material. A good example of this is a hot cup of tea that is stirred with a metal spoon. As heat flows from the tea to the immersed part of the spoon, that section of the spoon becomes hot. The atoms begin to vibrate rapidly. The immersed atoms are tightly connected to the neighboring atoms along the handle of the spoon. As a result, these atoms also begin vibrating. Their vibrations cause the molecules in your fingertips to vibrate, which creates the feeling of warmth. In metals, free electrons carry the heat energy faster than the atomic vibrations and transfer it by colliding with other electrons and atoms. Because of this, metals are particularly good conductors of heat because their particles are very closely packed so the vibrations are passed on very quickly.
 
You are giving definitions of conduction. Can you think of an engineering system (i.e. gadget) that relies on the conduction process, as you have described it, to do something useful for people?
 
Can i take for example a solar water heater?
 
Sure, but you need to specify from where to where the conduction takes place and show that without conduction (i.e. if you insulated the part where conduction takes place) the solar water heater will no longer heat water.
 
Ahhhh ok...thank you very much...
i will elaborate on it...It's more clear now...=)
 
Back
Top