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Hello!Is there a material that can receive 0.5kW of heat or electricity in one hour and raise its temperature by 1 degree C?I need it to be 50 qubic mm.Thanks!
You could try stuffing neutrons into a hydrogen nucleus, perhaps?
Is there a material that can receive 0.5kW of heat in one hour ?
I need it to be 50 qubic mm.
The effective thermal conductivity varies with heat pipe length, and can approach 100 kW/(m⋅K) for long heat pipes, in comparison with approximately 0.4 kW/(m⋅K) for copper.
do you mean a cube 50 mm on each side or do you really mean 50 cubic mm (about 3.7 mm each side)?
Quote from: Bored chemist on 26/01/2019 18:40:40do you mean a cube 50 mm on each side or do you really mean 50 cubic mm (about 3.7 mm each side)?
OK, now what do you mean by "0.5W of heat or electricity in one hour "Do you mean for an hour?
What is the minimum temperature rise that this will induce after 1h?
Quote from: scientizscht on 27/01/2019 14:52:37What is the minimum temperature rise that this will induce after 1h?Well that's enough energy to melt about 5g of ice. YOu are trying to dissipate it in something like 50 mg of materialThere's no way to store it in such a small object
1600 joules are needed to melt 5grams of ice? From 0C to 1C?
Quote from: scientizscht on 27/01/2019 15:14:171600 joules are needed to melt 5grams of ice? From 0C to 1C?NoThat's the energy needed to melt it without raising the temperature.To convert it from ice at 0C to water at 0CThe latent heat of fusion of water is about 334 J/gOn a gram for gram basis, it's about as good as you get.Why are you trying to do something impossible?
Aren't there materials that are very very resistant to get hot?
There are materials that you make a glove and it allows you to touch a flame or something very very hot without getting burned.