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Most heat transfer texts include the same material: conduction,
convection, and radiation. How the material is presented, how well
the author writes the explanatory and descriptive material, and the
number and quality of practice problems is what makes the
difference. Even more important, however, is how students receive
the text. Engineering Heat Transfer, Third Edition provides a solid
foundation in the principles of heat transfer, while strongly
emphasizing practical applications and keeping mathematics to a
minimum.
The text covers practical applications in a way that
de-emphasizes mathematical techniques, but preserves physical
interpretation of heat transfer fundamentals and modeling of heat
transfer phenomena. For example, in the analysis of fins, actual
finned cylinders were cut apart, fin dimensions were measures, and
presented for analysis in example problems and in practice
problems. The chapter introducing convection heat transfer
describes and presents the traditional coffee pot problem practice
problems. The chapter on convection heat transfer in a closed
conduit gives equations to model the flow inside an internally
finned duct. The end-of-chapter problems proceed from short and
simple confidence builders to difficult and lengthy problems that
exercise hard core problems solving ability.
The book provides design engineers an elemental understanding of the variables that influence pressure drop and heat transfer in plain and micro-fin tubes to thermal systems using liquid single-phase flow in different industrial applications. It also provides design engineers using gas-liquid, two-phase flow in different industrial applications the necessary fundamentals of the two-phase flow variables. The author and his colleagues were the first to determine experimentally the very important relationship between inlet geometry and transition. On the basis of their results, they developed practical and easy to use correlations for the isothermal and non-isothermal friction factor (pressure drop) and heat transfer coefficient (Nusselt number) in the transition region as well as the laminar and turbulent flow regions for different inlet configurations and fin geometry. This work presented herein provides the thermal systems design engineer the necessary design tools. The author further presents a succinct review of the flow patterns, void fraction, pressure drop and non-boiling heat transfer phenomenon and recommends some of the well scrutinized modeling techniques.
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