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Temperature-time histories at the interface between a gas and a solid

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2006

John F. Clarke
Affiliation:
College of Aeronautics, Cranfield, England
At the Department of Aeronautical Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, California, for the academic year 1961/62.

Abstract

The effects of compressibility, temperature-jump and gaseous adsorption are considered in an attempt to predict the temperature-time history at the interface between a gas and a solid when both the temperature and the pressure of the gas are suddenly changed. It appears that temperature-jump will be the dominant effect, with adsorption contributing significantly in some circumstances. Compressibility is of minor importance during practically-resolvable time intervals. Some experimental evidence which gives tentative support to the results of the analysis is commented upon.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 1962 Cambridge University Press

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References

Clarke, J. F. 1960a College of Aeronautics Note, no. 102.
Clarke, J. F. 1960b College of Aeronautics Rep. no. 124.
Clarke, J. F. 1961 College of Aeronautics Rep. no. 149.
Cole, J. D. & Wu, T. Y. 1952 J. Appl. Mech. 19, 209.
Erdelyi, A. et al. 1954 Tables of Integral Transforms, vol. 1. New York: McGraw Hill Book Co., Inc.
Rushbrooke, G. S. 1949 Statistical Mechanics. Oxford: Clarendon Press.