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Equilibrium temperature of a metallic bar

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144x

Electrical
Joined
Mar 15, 2001
Messages
123
Location
AU
Hi,

If a metallic bar is continuously heated by a heater, how the final temperature of the metallic bar can be calculated? I'm looking for some formula's to do manual calculations without resorting to sophisticated softwares. Metallic bar is not enclosed and on one side is in touch with a heater.

kind regards.
 
Is the heater limited by power or temperature?
If it is power then you just balance the input power (to the bar, this may be limited by the thermal conductivity of the material) with the convective and radiant heat loss from the bar.
How long it will take is another problem altogether.

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P.E. Metallurgy, consulting work welcomed
 
144x: Look at two things - how the heat gets added to the bar, and how the heat gets dissipated from the bar. The addition portion is a result of the heating element - convection (indirect contact), conduction (direct contact), or both. Both have limits on how the heat gets to the bar (thermal efficiency). Likewise, look at how the heat gets out - again, convection and/or conduction. There is an efficiency to this part of the process as well. How the two sides of the equation work together determines how much heat the bar can contain - and thus it's final "steady state" temperature as a result of a given thermal input. (Note: this also applies to COOLING a bar!)

Converting energy to motion for more than half a century
 
Is there an example or guide or standard that has the formula that you can guide me to?
 
Any basic college text on heat transfer will have a similar example.
Find an ME and borrow one.

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P.E. Metallurgy, consulting work welcomed
 
Omega Engineering, Chromalox, and Watlow have good handbooks/catalogs for calculating heat losses empirically,
 
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