language-icon Old Web
English
Sign In

Film temperature

In heat transfer and fluid dynamics, the film temperature ( T f {displaystyle T_{f}} ) is an approximation to the temperature of a fluid inside a convection boundary layer. It is calculated as the arithmetic mean of the temperature at the surface of the solid boundary wall ( T w {displaystyle T_{w}} ) and the free-stream temperature ( T ∞ {displaystyle T_{infty }} ): In heat transfer and fluid dynamics, the film temperature ( T f {displaystyle T_{f}} ) is an approximation to the temperature of a fluid inside a convection boundary layer. It is calculated as the arithmetic mean of the temperature at the surface of the solid boundary wall ( T w {displaystyle T_{w}} ) and the free-stream temperature ( T ∞ {displaystyle T_{infty }} ): The film temperature is often used as the temperature at which fluid properties are calculated when using Prandtl number, Nusselt number, Reynolds number or Grashof number to calculate a heat transfer coefficient, because it is a reasonable first approximation to the temperature within the convection boundary layer. Somewhat confusing terminology may be encountered in relation to boilers and heat exchangers, where the same term is used to refer to the limit (hot) temperature of a fluid in contact with a hot surface.

[ "Heat transfer coefficient", "Convective heat transfer", "Natural convection", "Heat flux", "Reynolds number", "Logarithmic mean temperature difference", "Chilton and Colburn J-factor analogy", "Conjugate convective heat transfer", "Turbulent Prandtl number", "Laplace number" ]
Parent Topic
Child Topic
    No Parent Topic