Week#14
Week#14
Week#14
Materials
Instructor: Assist. Prof. Pelin TÖREN ÖZGÜN Materials Science and Engineering Department
Chapter 19:
Thermal Properties
ISSUES TO ADDRESS...
• How do materials respond to the application of heat?
• How do we define and measure...
-- heat capacity?
-- thermal expansion?
-- thermal conductivity?
-- thermal shock resistance?
Chapter 19 - 2
Heat Capacity
The ability of a material to absorb heat
• Quantitatively: The energy required to produce a unit rise in
temperature for one mole of a material.
energy input (J/mol)
heat capacity dQ
(J/mol-K) C=
dT temperature change (K)
Gold 128
Chapter 19 - 6
Thermal Expansion
Materials change size when temperature
is changed
Tinitial
initial
Tfinal > Tinitial
Tfinal
final
l − l initial
final
= l (Tfinal −Tinitial)
l initial
linear coefficient of
thermal expansion (1/K or 1/ºC)
Chapter 19 - 7
Atomic Perspective: Thermal
Expansion
Soda-lime glass 9
Silica (cryst. SiO2) 0.4
Chapter 19 - 9
Thermal Expansion: Example
Ex: A copper wire 15 m long is cooled from
40 to -9ºC. How much change in length will it
experience?
• Answer: For Cu = 16.5 x 10−6 ( C)−1
rearranging Equation 19.3b
= 0 T = [16
.5 x 10 −6
(1/ C)](15 m)[40C − ( −9C)]
= 0.012 m = 12 mm
Chapter 19 - 10
Thermal Conductivity
The ability of a material to transport heat.
Fourier’s Law
temperature
dT
q = −k gradient
heat flux dx
(J/m2-s) thermal conductivity (J/m-K-s)
T1 T2
T2 > T1
x1 heat flux x2
Chapter 19 - 11
Thermal Conductivity: Comparison
Energy Transfer
Material k (W/m-K) Mechanism
• Metals
Aluminum 247 atomic vibrations
Steel 52 and motion of free
Tungsten 178
electrons
Gold 315
• Ceramics
increasing k
Magnesia (MgO) 38
Alumina (Al2O3) 39 atomic vibrations
Soda-lime glass 1.7
Silica (cryst. SiO2) 1.4
• Polymers
Polypropylene 0.12
Polyethylene 0.46-0.50 vibration/rotation of
Polystyrene 0.13 chain molecules
Teflon 0.25
Selected values from Table 19.1, Callister & Rethwisch 8e. Chapter 19 - 12
Thermal Stresses
• Occur due to:
-- restrained thermal expansion/contraction
-- temperature gradients that lead to differential
dimensional changes
Thermal stress =
= E (T0 −Tf ) = E T
Assist. Prof. Pelin TÖREN ÖZGÜN Materials Science and Engineering Department Chapter 19 -
Example Problem
-- A brass rod is stress-free at room temperature (20ºC).
-- It is heated up, but prevented from lengthening.
-- At what temperature does the stress reach -172 MPa?
Solution:
T0 Original conditions
0
Step 1: Assume unconstrained thermal expansion
0
= thermal = (Tf −T0 )
Tf room
= −E(thermal ) = −E
(Tf −T0 ) = E (T0 −Tf )
Rearranging and solving for Tf gives
20ºC
-172 MPa (since in compression)
Tf = T0 −
E
Chapter 19 - 20