| In the simplest of terms, the discipline of heat
transfer is concerned with only two things: temperature, and the
flow of heat. Temperature represents the
amount of thermal energy available, whereas heat flow represents the
movement of thermal energy from place to place.
On a microscopic scale, thermal energy is related to the kinetic
energy of molecules. The greater a material's temperature, the
greater the thermal agitation of its constituent molecules
(manifested both in linear motion and vibrational modes). It is
natural for regions containing greater molecular kinetic energy to
pass this energy to regions with less kinetic energy.
Several material properties serve to modulate the heat tranfered
between two regions at differing temperatures. Examples include
thermal conductivities, specific heats, material densities, fluid
velocities, fluid viscosities, surface emissivities, and more. Taken
together, these properties serve to make the solution of many heat
transfer problems an involved process. |