chadupperbody
Automotive
- Aug 9, 2012
- 1
Hi.
I'm designing a box to do thermal testing on some electrical products at elevated temperature (85C) under natural convection. Up till now the products have been tested under forced convection, i.e. free within a forced convection environmental chamber. However this environment isn't representative of what they'd experience in real-life, i.e. a static air enclosed environment where the only cooling mechanisms are natural convection and radiation.
What I've done so far is place a plywood box into a forced convection environmental chamber. Thermocouples have been placed in air near 5 faces of the box, both inside and outside - 10 total. These thermocouples are there purely to measure the air temperature and see if it's possible to obtain a steady temperature within the box. Once this is done, I'll introduce the products and see how that works out.
My question is: Given enough time to reach steady state, will the thermocouples on the inside of the box read the same temperature as the outside of the box?
Or will the fact that one set of thermocouples is in moving air, whereas the other is in static air result in a difference in readings?
Also, now that I've explained what I'm trying to do maybe someone has come up with a similar problem in the past. So another few questions...
- Should the box have high (metal) or low (nylon) thermal conductivity?
- Should there be holes in the box to allow some airflow through the box, i.e. at a level that doesn't introduce forced convection as a significant heat transfer mode?
Thanks.
I'm designing a box to do thermal testing on some electrical products at elevated temperature (85C) under natural convection. Up till now the products have been tested under forced convection, i.e. free within a forced convection environmental chamber. However this environment isn't representative of what they'd experience in real-life, i.e. a static air enclosed environment where the only cooling mechanisms are natural convection and radiation.
What I've done so far is place a plywood box into a forced convection environmental chamber. Thermocouples have been placed in air near 5 faces of the box, both inside and outside - 10 total. These thermocouples are there purely to measure the air temperature and see if it's possible to obtain a steady temperature within the box. Once this is done, I'll introduce the products and see how that works out.
My question is: Given enough time to reach steady state, will the thermocouples on the inside of the box read the same temperature as the outside of the box?
Or will the fact that one set of thermocouples is in moving air, whereas the other is in static air result in a difference in readings?
Also, now that I've explained what I'm trying to do maybe someone has come up with a similar problem in the past. So another few questions...
- Should the box have high (metal) or low (nylon) thermal conductivity?
- Should there be holes in the box to allow some airflow through the box, i.e. at a level that doesn't introduce forced convection as a significant heat transfer mode?
Thanks.