Rmechanical
Mechanical
- Feb 16, 2009
- 12
I need to design and come up with the analysis of an oven, but just a few guidelines were given to me. I'm a recent grad so I'd like some advice on this because I've never done something like this before. Here are a few guidelines:
- The oven is cylindrical. About 5m long and 20 in. diameter
- The heater is at one end, and the temperature must be maintained at 170C within +- 1 degree across the whole length. (a fan would be used to circulate the hot air and the exhaust will be fed into the system - closed loop, and the flow shall be laminar)
- Inside the main chamber, another sub-chamber will be built. The sub-chamber will have an inner and outer material of different thermal conductivities to allow a uniform heat transfer to the area where the sample will be tested.
- The oven will be insulated, so the walls can be considered adiabatic to the outside. Pressure is held constant as well.
I need to calculate the temperature distribution in the inner chamber every 2 feet, come up with the dimensions for the heater (length, wall thickness, etc), the power needed for the system, materials, the time needed to heat the samples, and make sure the temperature in the testing area is maintained constant at 170 C.
I'm unsure in how to tackle the problem, and we don't have a senior engineer to give us advice, so I'm on my own.
So far I've used the formulas for convection and conduction heat transfer, but I'm having problems calculating the heat transfer coefficient, h, for air. I've been using the Reynolds and Nusselt numbers, but the values I get for h are <1, and I read the values for air are typically from 1 to 100, and even more in forced convection.
I've also looked into formulas for extended surfaces from my heat transfer book in order to get an approximate heat distribution.
In order to see how much time is required for the sample to heat up, I've been reading the lumped capacitance method, and to calculate how much energy is needed to heat everything from 25 to 170C, I used the heat capacity and mass of each material to solve for energy in joules.
My numbers seem quite realistic, but since I have no previous experience in the matter I'd like to revise them.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks in advance.
Roger
- The oven is cylindrical. About 5m long and 20 in. diameter
- The heater is at one end, and the temperature must be maintained at 170C within +- 1 degree across the whole length. (a fan would be used to circulate the hot air and the exhaust will be fed into the system - closed loop, and the flow shall be laminar)
- Inside the main chamber, another sub-chamber will be built. The sub-chamber will have an inner and outer material of different thermal conductivities to allow a uniform heat transfer to the area where the sample will be tested.
- The oven will be insulated, so the walls can be considered adiabatic to the outside. Pressure is held constant as well.
I need to calculate the temperature distribution in the inner chamber every 2 feet, come up with the dimensions for the heater (length, wall thickness, etc), the power needed for the system, materials, the time needed to heat the samples, and make sure the temperature in the testing area is maintained constant at 170 C.
I'm unsure in how to tackle the problem, and we don't have a senior engineer to give us advice, so I'm on my own.
So far I've used the formulas for convection and conduction heat transfer, but I'm having problems calculating the heat transfer coefficient, h, for air. I've been using the Reynolds and Nusselt numbers, but the values I get for h are <1, and I read the values for air are typically from 1 to 100, and even more in forced convection.
I've also looked into formulas for extended surfaces from my heat transfer book in order to get an approximate heat distribution.
In order to see how much time is required for the sample to heat up, I've been reading the lumped capacitance method, and to calculate how much energy is needed to heat everything from 25 to 170C, I used the heat capacity and mass of each material to solve for energy in joules.
My numbers seem quite realistic, but since I have no previous experience in the matter I'd like to revise them.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks in advance.
Roger