430 likes | 864 Views
Temperature dependence of the total, normal emissivity e n of selected materials. Representative values of total, normal emissivity e n. Absorptivity. dependence on the directional and spectral distributions of the incident radiation, thus not a material property except. f i. q i. dA.
E N D
Temperature dependence of the total, normal emissivity en of selected materials
Absorptivity dependence on the directional and spectral distributions of the incident radiation, thus not a material property except fi qi dA Directional spectral absorptivity
Ilb dw Il Kirchhoff’s law blackbody atT q dAatT absorbed energy emitted energy in equilibrium : no restriction
when not function of l Directional total absorptivity absorbed energy at l and (qi, fi) directional-gray surface
when only: ii) when independent of direction Hemispherical spectral absorptivity diffuse irradiation diffuse-spectral surface
i) when Hemispherical total absorptivity : diffuse-gray surface
Relations among reflectivity, absorptivity, and emissivity a) b) Kirchhoff’s law for a directional-gray surface,
c) d) for a diffuse-spectral surface, for a diffuse-gray surface,
Example 12.7 • Find: • Spectral distribution of reflectivity rl • Hemispherical total absorptivity a • Nature of surface temperature change
= 5000 W/m2 2)Hemispherical total absorptivity a incident radiation in W at l: absorbed energy: Why is the value of a(= 0.76) closer to unity ?
Since , the surface temperature will increase with time. 3)Nature of surface temperature change Does the surface temperature increase or decrease?
Environmental Radiation extraterrestrial solar irradiation Solar rays q Gs,o Sc Earth atmosphere Earth surface Sc: solar constant (flux of solar energy incident on a surface oriented normal to the sun’s rays, when the earth is at its mean distance from the sun) f : correction factor to account for the eccentricity of the earth’s orbit about the sun q : incident angle of solar irradiation
Directional distribution of solar radiation at earth’s surface actual diffuse
Scattering of solar radiation in the earth’s atmosphere
Find: • Useful heat removal rate per unit area, • Efficiency h of the collector. Example 12.11 flat-plate solar collector : useful heat removal • Assumptions: • steady-state • absorber surface diffuse
: useful heat removal 1)Useful heat removal rate
Comments: • Since the spectral range of Gsky is entirely different • from that of GS, it would be incorrect to assume that • asky = aS . • 2) With a convection coefficient , the useful heat flux and the efficiency are reduced to • and . A cover plate can contribute significantly to reducing convection (and radiation) heat loss from the absorber plate. : useful heat removal 2)The collector efficiency
Reflectivity Il,i dwi dIl,r dwr dA Directional-hemispherical spectral reflectivity
Il,r Il,i dA dA
Il,r Il,i dA dA Hemispherical-directional spectral reflectivity average incident intensity
Reciprocity: when is uniform over all incident directions
dwi Il,r Il,i dwr dA Hemispherical spectral reflectivity
A transmitting Layer with Thickness L >l 1 r r3 (1-r)t3(1-t) r (1-r)t(1-t) (1-r)(1-t) r2(1-r)t2(1-t) r (1-r)2t2 r3 (1-r)2t4 1-r r2(1-r)t2 r3 (1-r)t4 r4 (1-r)t4 r (1-r)t2 (1-r)t r (1-r)t r2 (1-r)t3 r3 (1-r)t3 (1-r)2t r2 (1-r)2t3 Reflectance Transmittance
1 r r (1-r)2t2 r3 (1-r)2t4 1-r r2(1-r)t2 r3 (1-r)t4 r4 (1-r)t4 r (1-r)t2 r3 (1-r)t3(1-t) r (1-r)t(1-t) (1-r)(1-t) r2(1-r)t2(1-t) (1-r)t r (1-r)t r2 (1-r)t3 r3 (1-r)t3 (1-r)2t r2 (1-r)2t3 Absorptance R + T + A =1 spectral transmittance total transmittance
the amount of radiation energy streaming out through a unit area perpendicular to the direction of propagation , per unit solid angle around the direction w, per unit wavelength around l, and per unit time about t. the amount of radiation energy intercepted by dA2 per unit wavelength, per unit time [W/mm]