A Heat and Mass Transfer Correlation for Laminar and Turbulent Flow Across a Low-Slope Roof PDF

A Heat and Mass Transfer Correlation for Laminar and Turbulent Flow Across a Low-Slope Roof PDF

Name:
A Heat and Mass Transfer Correlation for Laminar and Turbulent Flow Across a Low-Slope Roof PDF

Published Date:
2001

Status:
Active

Description:

Publisher:
ASHRAE

Document status:
Active

Format:
Electronic (PDF)

Delivery time:
10 minutes

Delivery time (for Russian version):
200 business days

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An energy balance at the exterior surface of a roof is an essential boundary condition for mathematically describing the heat flow through a multilayered insulated roof. The dominant parameters affecting the heat flow during the daylight hours are convection and the surface properties of reflectance and emittance. At night and during the twilight hours, the infrared emittance and mass transfer balance against the roof'­s heat flow. The mass-transfer coefficient is calculated directly from a dimensionless term called the Lewis number and the air-side convective-heat-transfer coefficient. The approach is applicable to turbulent and laminar flow regimes. However, research has shown the calculation procedure to be questionable at both low velocities and small airto-water temperature differences, conditions prevalent during the evening hours on a low-slope roof. Hence, a correlation was formulated and validated against experimental data to better estimate the mass-transfer coefficient and, therefore, the heat transfer through the roof when condensation or evaporation occurs.

Authors: William A. Miller, Ph.D., P.E.; Jerald A. Atchley

Citation: Thermal Performance of the Exterior Envelopes of Buildings VIII

Keywords: December, Florida, 2001


File Size : 1 file , 700 KB
Note : This product is unavailable in Russia, Belarus
Product Code(s) : D-7960
Published : 2001

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