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If the gap is too narrow, you can't get laminar flow down one side and up the other - turbulent mixing interrupts the convection pattern. That's how gas-filled double glazing works, regardless of the belief system of the observer.
Not sure how air is "drawn in" to a cavity wall acting as a chimney. Mine are supposed to be wind- and water-proof all the way to the ground.
As for the density and conductivity of the filler, polystyrene or polyurethane foam is about 96% air by volume - you can pretty much ignore the plastic content
I simply cannot see much difference between air in non convecting horizontal containers or a big cavity?
And turbulence occurs more in small spaces, while laminar flow is possible in large spaces
But what difference does it make if the air undergoes heating, convects and then cools to air that under goes heating and cooling between pockets in a linear fashion? I cannot see the difference
it all has to "pick up" heat one side and deposit it the other,
Convection means driving down one side of the street to collect stuff from n houses, then driving back up the other side, depositing rubbish as you go, so you shift all the stuff in a distance 2l where l is the length of the road.For conduction, you shuttle between the sides of the road, taking one bin at a time so you have to drive 2nw to shift the same amount of stuff across the road, where w is the width of the road. Replace the dustcart with a molecule and n becomes very large.
For conduction, you shuttle between the sides of the road, taking one bin at a time so you have to drive 2nw to shift the same amount of stuff across the road, where w is the width of the road.
Sorry i cannot believe convection
Quote from: evan_au on 31/01/2024 21:39:28And turbulence occurs more in small spaces, while laminar flow is possible in large spacesBut what is the difference between air convecting and air transmitting, it all has to "pick up" heat one side and deposit it the other, whether it is replaced in a flow, or is static, all of the air has to perform this task.Would a cavity wall with 10cm high partitions in a 10cm cavity or even 10cm cubes really perform better than a 10cm open cavity?
Where convection is possible, the rate of transfer of heat from the left side to the right side can be very high. However, if you can prevent convection then the air can only use conduction to transfer heat from left to right which is slower. As the earlier posts have suggested, in small spaces, Convection is prevented. Any attempy to establish an organised flow of air is quickly disrupted and just becomes a chaotic flow of molecules in random directions. Best Wishes.
Would a cavity wall with 10cm high partitions in a 10cm cavity or even 10cm cubes really perform better than a 10cm open cavity?
So a line of molecules 1 thick in a circulation that is based on conduction from on one side and conduction to the other seems scientifically more transmissive than a column containing many particles each conducting heat from one side to the other? It is all based on conduction.
. With convection the air molecules are quickly moved from one wall to the other wall.
However, how thick are the bricks that form these partitions?
Bubble wrap works pretty well (ask any rough sleeper) but tends to collapse under its own weight and is a fire or toxic smoke hazard, so it isn't used in buildings.