AIR1168/2A Heat and Mass Transfer and Air-Water Mixtures

Stabilized

07/25/2011

Features
Issuing Committee
Scope
Content
Heat transfer is the transport of thermal energy from one point to another. Heat is transferred only under the influence of a temperature gradient or temperature difference. The direction of heat transfer is always from the point at the higher temperature to the point at the lower temperature, in accordance with the second law of thermodynamics. The fundamental modes of heat transfer are conduction, convection, and radiation. Conduction is the net transfer of energy within a fluid or solid occurring by the collisions of molecules, atoms, or electrons. Convection is the transfer of energy resulting from fluid motion. Convection involves the processes of conduction, fluid motion, and mass transfer. Radiation is the transfer of energy from one point to another in the absence of a transporting medium. In practical applications several modes of heat transfer occur simultaneously. For example, aerodynamic heating of a vehicle surface includes convection to the surface, radiation away from the surface, and conduction through the surface structure. Since the three modes of heat transfer obey different laws, a real insight into such a problem can be gained only after they have been studied separately.
Rationale
Content
This document has been determined to contain basic and stable technology which is not dynamic in nature.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/AIR1168/2A
Pages
194
Citation
SAE International Information Report, Heat and Mass Transfer and Air-Water Mixtures, SAE Standard AIR1168/2A, Stabilized July 2011, Reaffirmed December 2007, Issued August 2001, https://doi.org/10.4271/AIR1168/2A.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Jul 25, 2011
Product Code
AIR1168/2A
Content Type
Information Report
Status
Stabilized
Language
English

Revisions