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Heat Transfer a Different Elevations

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Shooze

Mechanical
Sep 11, 2007
13
When a heater is installed at a higher elevation than sea level does it take more or less gas to heat the bath
 
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Not anywhere neat 100% sure I understand the question, but there is a post only a few clicks below this one about "Thermal conductivity of a vacuum", the main jist being that pressure does not affect thermal conductivity of a gas unless you get to extremely low levels, as in less than .01 Torr.



-Plasmech

Mechanical Engineer, Plastics Industry
 
The other half of the answer is that only the BOILING point is affected by pressure, so unless the intent is the consume the bather afterwards, the heating to a non-boiling temperature is the same, since you'd most likely do this in a water heater that's amply insulated.

TTFN

FAQ731-376
 
I wish this forum had an "edit" feature...ugh.

-Plasmech

Mechanical Engineer, Plastics Industry
 
The film coefficient will change with gas conductance/density which changes with elevation.

Higher elevations will require more gas to heat the bath because heat transfer is lower.
 
I think willard's got it. Properties of the hot flue gases will change with pressure. Increasing elevation = decreasing pressure = changes making the heat transfer process less eficient.
Doug.
 
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