मराठी
कर्नाटक बोर्ड पी.यू.सी.पीयूसी विज्ञान इयत्ता ११

A Uniform Slab of Dimension 10 Cm × 10 Cm × 1 Cm is Kept Between Two Heat Reservoirs at Temperatures 10°C and 90°C. the Larger - Physics

Advertisements
Advertisements

प्रश्न

A uniform slab of dimension 10 cm × 10 cm × 1 cm is kept between two heat reservoirs at temperatures 10°C and 90°C. The larger surface areas touch the reservoirs. The thermal conductivity of the material is 0.80 W m−1 °C−1. Find the amount of heat flowing through the slab per minute.

बेरीज
Advertisements

उत्तर

Given:
Thermal conductivity of the material, k = 0.80 W m-1  °c-1
Area of the cross section of the slab, A = 100 cm2  = 10-2 m2
Thickness of the slab, Δx = 1 cm = 10 -2 m

`"Rate of flow of heat" ="Temperature  difference" / "Thermal resisstance"`

`⇒ (ΔQ)/(Δt) = (ΔT)/((Δx)/(kA)`

`(ΔQ)/(Δt) = ((90 - 10 ) k.A)/(Δx)`

`(ΔQ)/(Δt) = ((80) xx 0.8 xx 10^-2)/(Δx)1`

`(ΔQ)/(Δt)= 64 J //s`

`(ΔQ)/(Δt) = 64xx60 = 3840  J//min`

shaalaa.com
Thermal Expansion of Solids
  या प्रश्नात किंवा उत्तरात काही त्रुटी आहे का?
पाठ 6: Heat Transfer - Exercises [पृष्ठ ९८]

APPEARS IN

एचसी वर्मा Concepts of Physics Vol. 2 [English] Class 11 and 12
पाठ 6 Heat Transfer
Exercises | Q 1 | पृष्ठ ९८

संबंधित प्रश्‍न

A solid object is placed in water contained in an adiabatic container for some time. The temperature of water falls during this period and there is no appreciable change in the shape of the object. The temperature of the solid object


A bullet of mass 20 g enters into a fixed wooden block with a speed of 40 m s−1 and stops in it. Find the change in internal energy during the process.


A van of mass 1500 kg travelling at a speed of 54 km h−1 is stopped in 10 s. Assuming that all the mechanical energy lost appears as thermal energy in the brake mechanism, find the average rate of production of thermal energy is cal s−1.


A block of mass 100 g slides on a rough horizontal surface. If the speed of the block decreases from 10 m s−1 to 5 m s−1, find the thermal energy developed in the process.


A liquid-nitrogen container is made of a 1 cm thick styrofoam sheet having thermal conductivity 0.025 J s−1 m−1 °C−1. Liquid nitrogen at 80 K is kept in it. A total area of 0.80 m2 is in contact with the liquid nitrogen. The atmospheric temperature us 300 K. Calculate the rate of heat flow from the atmosphere to the liquid nitrogen.


Water is boiled in a container having a bottom of surface area 25 cm2, thickness 1.0 mm and thermal conductivity 50 W m−1°C−1. 100 g of water is converted into steam per minute in the steady state after the boiling starts. Assuming that no heat is lost to the atmosphere, calculate the temperature of the lower surface of the bottom. Latent heat of vaporisation of water = 2.26 × 106 J kg−1.


A icebox almost completely filled with ice at 0°C is dipped into a large volume of water at 20°C. The box has walls of surface area 2400 cm2, thickness 2.0 mm and thermal conductivity 0.06 W m−1°C−1. Calculate the rate at which the ice melts in the box. Latent heat of fusion of ice = 3.4 × 105 J kg−1.


A pitcher with 1-mm thick porous walls contains 10 kg of water. Water comes to its outer surface and evaporates at the rate of 0.1 g s−1. The surface area of the pitcher (one side) = 200 cm2. The room temperature = 42°C, latent heat of vaporization = 2.27 × 10J kg−1, and the thermal conductivity of the porous walls = 0.80 J s−1 m−1°C−1. Calculate the temperature of water in the pitcher when it attains a constant value.


Water at 50°C is filled in a closed cylindrical vessel of height 10 cm and cross sectional area 10 cm2. The walls of the vessel are adiabatic but the flat parts are made of 1-mm thick aluminium (K = 200 J s−1 m−1°C−1). Assume that the outside temperature is 20°C. The density of water is 100 kg m−3, and the specific heat capacity of water = 4200 J k−1g °C−1. Estimate the time taken for the temperature of fall by 1.0 °C. Make any simplifying assumptions you need but specify them.


The ends of a metre stick are maintained at 100°C and 0°C. One end of a rod is maintained at 25°C. Where should its other end be touched on the metre stick so that there is no heat current in the rod in steady state?


A metal rod of cross sectional area 1.0 cm2 is being heated at one end. At one time, the temperatures gradient is 5.0°C cm−1 at cross section A and is 2.5°C cm−1 at cross section B. Calculate the rate at which the temperature is increasing in the part AB of the rod. The heat capacity of the part AB = 0.40 J°C−1, thermal conductivity of the material of the rod = 200 W m−1°C−1. Neglect any loss of heat to the atmosphere


A hole of radius r1 is made centrally in a uniform circular disc of thickness d and radius r2. The inner surface (a cylinder a length d and radius r1) is maintained at a temperature θ1 and the outer surface (a cylinder of length d and radius r2) is maintained at a temperature θ2 (θ1 > θ2). The thermal  conductivity of the material of the disc is K. Calculate the heat flowing per unit time through the disc.


A composite slab is prepared by pasting two plates of thickness L1 and L2 and thermal conductivites K1 and K2. The slabs have equal cross-sectional area. Find the equivalent conductivity of the composite slab.


The two rods shown in following figure  have identical geometrical dimensions. They are in contact with two heat baths at temperatures 100°C and 0°C. The temperature of the junction is 70°C. Find the temperature of the junction if the rods are interchanged.


The three rods shown in figure  have identical geometrical dimensions. Heat flows from the hot end at a rate of 40 W in the arrangement (a). Find the rates of heat flow when the rods are joined as in arrangement (b) and in (c). Thermal condcutivities of aluminium and copper are 200 W m−1°C−1 and 400 W m−1°C−1 respectively.


Find the rate of heat flow through a cross section of the rod shown in figure (28-E10) (θ2 > θ1). Thermal conductivity of the material of the rod is K.


A hollow metallic sphere of radius 20 cm surrounds a concentric metallic sphere of radius 5 cm. The space between the two spheres is filled with a nonmetallic material. The inner and outer spheres are maintained at 50°C and 10°C respectively and it is found that 100 J of heat passes from the inner sphere to the outer sphere per second. Find the thermal conductivity of the material between the spheres.


An amount n (in moles) of a monatomic gas at an initial temperature T0 is enclosed in a cylindrical vessel fitted with a light piston. The surrounding air has a temperature Ts (> T0) and the atmospheric pressure is Pα. Heat may be conducted between the surrounding and the gas through the bottom of the cylinder. The bottom has a surface area A, thickness x and thermal conductivity K. Assuming all changes to be slow, find the distance moved by the piston in time t.


Share
Notifications

Englishहिंदीमराठी


      Forgot password?
Use app×