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                                                Posted:
                            
                                1 decade ago                            
                            
                                2011/03/10 18:13 GMT-5                            
                        
                        
                                                    Heat transfer coefficient is not a property of the material, but of everything around it. If the air around your boundary is very stagnant, the coefficient may be 5-10 W/m^2/K. If it is moving fast, as in blown over by a CPU fan, it may be higher, perhaps around 50-100 W/m^2/K
Hope this helps.
Ozgur
 
Hi 
I am an Electrical Engineer and I am not much familiar with heat transferring issues. I have a structure made of silcon and silica and I need to know how does it dissipate heat. In the martial property I have to set "heat transfer coefficient" and I don't know what is that and even there isn't any littérateur on heat transfer coefficient of silicon or silica. Can anybody give me some idea?
Thanks
Faraz
                                                 
                                                
                            Heat transfer coefficient is not a property of the material, but of everything around it. If the air around your boundary is very stagnant, the coefficient may be 5-10 W/m^2/K. If it is moving fast, as in blown over by a CPU fan, it may be higher, perhaps around 50-100 W/m^2/K
Hope this helps.
Ozgur
 
[QUOTE]
Hi 
I am an Electrical Engineer and I am not much familiar with heat transferring issues. I have a structure made of silcon and silica and I need to know how does it dissipate heat. In the martial property I have to set "heat transfer coefficient" and I don't know what is that and even there isn't any littérateur on heat transfer coefficient of silicon or silica. Can anybody give me some idea?
Thanks
Faraz
[/QUOTE]
                        
                                                
                                                                                                            
                                             
                        
                        
                            
                                                                                        
                                Ivar KJELBERG
                                                                                                                                                    COMSOL Multiphysics(r) fan, retired, former "Senior Expert" at CSEM SA (CH)
                                                         
                            
                         
                                                
    
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                                                Posted:
                            
                                1 decade ago                            
                            
                                2011/03/11 1:27 GMT-5                            
                        
                        
                                                    Hi
my engineering "rule of thumb" values are:
1 atm air, normal temperature 20°C
very calm air 2[W/m^2/K]
normal laboratory air 5[W/m/K]
gentle air bow 10[W/m/K]
forced air blow 20-40[W/m/K]
--
Good luck
Ivar                                                
                                                
                            Hi
my engineering "rule of thumb" values are:
1 atm air, normal temperature 20°C
very calm air 2[W/m^2/K]
normal laboratory air 5[W/m/K]
gentle air bow 10[W/m/K]
forced air blow 20-40[W/m/K]
--
Good luck
Ivar