Experiment #3 Heat Insulation/Conduction: Final Laboratory Report Automotive Engineering Lab 1 (Mech 2118) Section 1
Experiment #3 Heat Insulation/Conduction: Final Laboratory Report Automotive Engineering Lab 1 (Mech 2118) Section 1
Experiment #3 Heat Insulation/Conduction: Final Laboratory Report Automotive Engineering Lab 1 (Mech 2118) Section 1
EXPERIMENT #3
HEAT INSULATION/CONDUCTION
GROUP MEMBERS
1. MUHAMMAD HANAFI BIN ISHAK (1624043)
2. MOHAMMAD AFIQ AZIM BIN MOHD KHELMEE (1627685)
3. FARIS HAZIQ BIN ABDUL MALEK (1624957)
EXPERIMENTERS
1. SYED NOH SYED ABU BAKAR, 044856, AEROSPACE
DATE OF EXPERIMENTS
Thursday, 1st March 2018 (2:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.)
DATE OF SUBMISSION
Thursday, 8th March 2018
TABLE OF CONTENTS
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OBJECTIVES
In each experiment, objectives should be focused so the experiment can work well.
Therefore, in this experiment, the objectives have been justified as below:
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INTRODUCTION
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temperature difference between the bulk of the fluid (average) and a boundary.
Thermal resistance is the measure of a material’s capability to resist the heat flow.
The formula for thermal resistance is usually expressed as R, which is computed value as
R=L/k, where L stands for thickness of the material and k stands for the thermal
conductivity constant. The value of R determines the insulation capacity of the material.
The higher the value of R, the smaller the heat transfer and the lower the value of R, the
greater the heat to go by the material. The SI units of thermal resistance is Kelvin’s per
Watt. Thermal resistance is also defined as the difference in the temperature from corner to
corner of a structure when a unit of heat energy flows through it in unit time. The heat flow
through a building construction depends on the temperature difference across it, the
conductivity of the materials used and the thickness of the materials. The temperature
difference is an external factor. The thickness and the conductivity are properties of the
material. A greater thickness means less heat flow and so does a lower conductivity.
Together these parameters form the thermal resistance of the construction. The thermal
resistance is proportional to the thickness of a layer of the construction and inversely
proportional to its conductivity. A construction layer with a high thermal resistance (e.g.
rock wool), is a good insulator, one with a low thermal resistance (e.g. concrete) is a bad
insulator.
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RESULT
PART A – FIRST 30 MINUTES
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DISCUSSION
Our experiment this week is the experiment regarding heat insulation and
conduction. This experiment are being done by finding the value of heat transfer through
the wall, Q, the heat per unit area, Q/A, heat transmission coefficient and 1/U which is the
thermal resistance. The value of k, the thermal conductivity are being done by referring to
the info that can be get through internet. The thermal conductivity for Wooden (2cm),
Styropor (2cm), Wooden (1cm) and Glass are 0.16W/mK, 0.033W/mK, 0.16W/mK and
0.16W/mK respectively.
Not complete!!
Based on the tables, for part A which involves wooden of 2cm styropor that
being held within 30 minutes, the heat transfer through the wall is positive and
increasing within time. But in part B which happened in the next 30 minutes, the heat
transfer through wall for both wooden and styropor decreasing directly proportional
with time but it was different with glass that undergoes increasing in the same period
of time. As part C, the heat transfer through the wall of wooden (2cm) and styropor
were decreasing while the heat transfer for wooden (1cm) and glass wall are having
consistent reading at around -12W and 8W respectively.
Regarding the heat transmission coefficient for wooden (2cm), styropor, glass
and wooden (1cm), the table show a constant for all subjects whereas 8.00W/m²K,
1.65 W/m²K, 40.00 W/m²K and 16.00 W/m²K respectively. Based on the number, it
can be said that glass has the highest number of heat transmission coefficient of 40.00
W/m²K while the lowest heat transmission coefficient is styropor at 1.65 W/m²K. This
was due to the factor that influence the efficiency of heat transfer. Heat transmission
coefficient for wooden (2cm) is double the number for wooden of 1cm. The number
prove that thickness also play role in heat transmission as we had discussed it.
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CONCLUSION
In conclusion, the heat transmission coefficient and thermal conductivity for Glass are the
highest among other three materials, whereas the heat transmission coefficient and thermal
conductivity for styropor are the lowest among other three materials. It proven that
thickness is a factor that influence thermal conductivity.
REFERENCES
Factors- https://concord.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/projects/eee/solar-house/EEE-
Ch2.2-sim-teacher.pdf
Thermalresistance-
https://www.newlearn.info/packages/clear/thermal/buildings/building_fabric/properties/re
sistance.html
- http://www.innovateus.net/innopedia/what-thermal-resistance
Law - https://www.quora.com/Which-law-of-thermodynamics-governs-heat-transfer
Good bad condcutors- http://www.preservearticles.com/201012261697/uses-of-good-and-
bad-conductors-of-heat.html