Engineering Properties
Engineering Properties
1. Size
2. Shape
3. Weight
4. Volume
5. Density
6. Porosity
7. Specific Gravity
8. Surface area
APPLICATION
In design of specific machine or analysis of product behaviour during
handling and processing operations.
The size of non-spherical objects like wheat kernels, pears may be described by
multiple length measurements.
SI units for particle size are micrometers (or microns) or millimeters depending on
the size range
Roundness
Sphericity
Aspect ratio
Ellipsoid ratio and
Slenderness ratio
Roundness is a measure of the sharpness of the corners of the solid.
• Roundness = Ap/Ac
• where: Ap = largest projected area of object in natural rest position
• Ac = area of smallest circumscribing circle
Aspect ratio = The aspect ratio of a geometric shape is the ratio of its
sizes in different dimensions.
Truncate
VOLUME
• Volume is defined as the amount of three-dimensional space occupied by an
object. In the SI system, the unit of volume is m3.
• Bulk volume: The volume of substance includes all pores within the material
(internal pores) and also the void volume outside the boundary of individual
particles when stacked in bulk (external pores).
• Particle volume: This volume is the actual volume of the solid granular
material, which is devoid of intergranular spaces.
• Solid volume :is the volume of the solid material (including water) excluding
any interior pores that are filled with air.
• It can be determined by the gas displacement method in which the gas is
capable of penetrating all open pores up to the diameter of the gas molecule.
• SHRINKAGE: This is the reduction in volume or geometric dimensions during
processing.
DENSITY
It of two types:
Bulk density and Particle density
POROSITY
• It is the percentage of air (pore space) between the particles compared to a unit bulk
volume of particles.
1. Heat capacity
2. Specific heat
3. Thermal conductivity
4. Thermal diffusivity
5. Surface heat transfer co-efficient
6. Latent heat of fusion and vapourization
7. Heat of respiration
8. Co-efficient of thermal expansion
9. Thermal Emissivity
Heat capacity
Heat capacity may be defined as the thermal capacity, is the amount of heat
required to change a substance's temperature by one degree. In SI units, heat
capacity (C ) is expressed in (J) per kelvin (K).
It is the Ratio of heat supplied (Q) to the corresponding temp rise (Δt )
C=Q/Δt
Specific heat
Specific heat (cp) or mass heat capacity is the heat required to increase the
temperature of one unit of mass by one degree.
The specific heat is expressed in kJ/(kg-K).
Q= m(t2-t1)Cp
THERMAL CONDUCTIVITY
Thermal conductivity is a measure of the ease with which heat flows through a
material. It is defined as the “heat flow through the material per unit of time (Q),
the cross sectional area of the material through which the heat flows (A), and the
temperature difference per unit thickness of the conducting material (dT/dx)”.
Q = k A (dT/dx)
ENTHALPY
• Total heat content of a material per unit mass.
• Enthalpy change is defined by the following equation:
H2– H1 = m cp (T2 – T1) + m Xw L
Where:
• H2–H1 = Enthalpy difference, m = Mass of product
• Xw= Water fraction
• T2 – T1 = Temperature difference, L = Latent heat
THERMAL DIFFUSIVITY
• In transient heat transfer, where temperature varies with time and location, the
relevant thermal property is thermal diffusivity.
• Thermal diffusivity (α, m2/s) is a combination of three basic thermal
properties, defined as “The rate at which heat is diffused out of the material.
• This is a quantity derived from conductivity, which is a measure of its ability
to exchange thermal energy with its surroundings”.
• Mathematically ,
• Thermal diffusivity = Thermal conductivity/(density × specific heat)
or
.
α = k/ρ Cp
CONVECTIVE HEAT TRANSFER COEFFICIENT
• The emissivity coefficient (ε) is the ratio of total emissive power of any body to
the total emissive power of a black body at the same temperature.
• If an hot object is radiating energy to its cooler surroundings the net radiation
heat loss rate can be expressed as :
• Where:
Q= rate heat transfer Q = A ε σ(Th4 - Tc4)
A= surface area
ε = 1 (black body) and <1 (real object)
σ = Stefan Boltzmann constant
Th & Tc = Absolute temperature of hot and cold body respectively
ASSIGNMENT NO. 8
a. Liquid displacement method
b. Gas displacement method
c. Application of thermal properties