jmkobe
Mechanical
- Oct 24, 2011
- 3
Hello All,
I'm trying to find an equation that will calculate/estimate the outside wall surface temperature of a heated chamber when I know the temperature inside the heated chamber, as well as the thickness and thermal conductivity of the insulation material. To put it another way, I'm trying to calculate/estimate how thick the insulation has to be to have the outside surface temperature be a certain temperature.
The inside of the chamber is held at 300F using recirculated air heated by a natural gas fired burner. The ambient temperature in the building is ~ 70F. The construction of the chamber "wall" is as follows:
Inner wall is 14 gauge mild steel.
Followed by a layer of high temperature insulation board (Thermal Conductivity ~ 0.33 BTU*in/hr*sq.ft*F)
Outer wall is 22 gauge galvanized steel sheet metal.
For the sake of simplicity, I'm okay with ignoring the effect of the inner and outer steel walls and saying the wall is made of only the insulation board.
Please help if you can. Thanks!
I'm trying to find an equation that will calculate/estimate the outside wall surface temperature of a heated chamber when I know the temperature inside the heated chamber, as well as the thickness and thermal conductivity of the insulation material. To put it another way, I'm trying to calculate/estimate how thick the insulation has to be to have the outside surface temperature be a certain temperature.
The inside of the chamber is held at 300F using recirculated air heated by a natural gas fired burner. The ambient temperature in the building is ~ 70F. The construction of the chamber "wall" is as follows:
Inner wall is 14 gauge mild steel.
Followed by a layer of high temperature insulation board (Thermal Conductivity ~ 0.33 BTU*in/hr*sq.ft*F)
Outer wall is 22 gauge galvanized steel sheet metal.
For the sake of simplicity, I'm okay with ignoring the effect of the inner and outer steel walls and saying the wall is made of only the insulation board.
Please help if you can. Thanks!