2 thermal conductivity – Roxul Industrial Insulation Process User Manual

Page 112

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2.2.2 Thermal conductivity

The material property defining heat flow through
an insulation material is thermal conductivity, “λ”
(or “k“). It indicates the heat flow rate “Q” through
unit area of material “A” induced by unit
temperature gradient “∆T / L” in a direction
perpendicular to that unit area (Heat-Flux per unit
temperature difference “∆T” across a unit
thickness “L” of material).

The unit of thermal conductivity is
BTU.in/hr⋅ft

2

⋅°F (W/m⋅K). The thermal conductivity

depends on the temperature, apparent density,
fiber material, fiber dimension and fiber structure
and orientation within the insulation and is made
up of the following parts:

Thermal conduction of the dormant air in

spaces between the fibers

Thermal radiation
Thermal conduction through the fibers
Convection

The dependency of these heat transport
mechanisms on apparent density and temperature
are shown in the graphs below. The individual
transport mechanisms cannot be measured
separately using existing measurement
techniques, but can be measured together to
allow thermal conductivity to be determined.

λ

=

Expressed on an inch-basis this is:

=

Heat-Flux

Unit-Temperature-Gradient

Q / A

(ΔT ⁄ L)

=

= BTU / hr

ft

°F

(BTU/hr) ⁄ ft

2

(F ⁄ ft)

= BTU

in / hr

ft

2∙

°F

(BTU/hr) ⁄ ft

2

(F ⁄ in)

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