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Heat Transfer by Conduction (Fourier's Law)

Calculate heat conduction using Q = kA(T₁-T₂)/d.
Fourier's law for steady-state heat transfer through solid materials.

The Formula

Q = kA(T₁ - T₂) / d

Fourier's law of heat conduction describes the rate of heat transfer through a solid material.

Heat flows from the hotter side to the cooler side.

The rate depends on the material's thermal conductivity, the area, the temperature difference, and the thickness.

Variables

SymbolMeaning
QRate of heat transfer (Watts, W)
kThermal conductivity of the material (W/(m·K))
ACross-sectional area through which heat flows (m²)
T₁Temperature of the hot side (°C or K)
T₂Temperature of the cold side (°C or K)
dThickness of the material (metres, m)

Common Thermal Conductivities

Materialk (W/(m·K))
Copper385
Aluminium205
Steel50
Glass1.0
Brick0.7
Wood0.15
Fibreglass insulation0.04

Example 1

A glass window is 1.2 m × 0.8 m and 6 mm thick. The inside temperature is 22°C and outside is 5°C. How much heat is lost? (k = 1.0 W/(m·K))

A = 1.2 × 0.8 = 0.96 m²

d = 0.006 m

Q = kA(T₁ - T₂) / d

Q = 1.0 × 0.96 × (22 - 5) / 0.006

Q = 1.0 × 0.96 × 17 / 0.006

Q = 2,720 W (2.72 kW)

Example 2

A brick wall is 3 m × 2.5 m and 0.23 m thick. Inside is 20°C, outside is 0°C. Find the heat loss rate. (k = 0.7 W/(m·K))

A = 3 × 2.5 = 7.5 m²

Q = kA(T₁ - T₂) / d

Q = 0.7 × 7.5 × (20 - 0) / 0.23

Q = 0.7 × 7.5 × 20 / 0.23

Q ≈ 456.5 W

When to Use It

Use Fourier's law when you need to:

  • Calculate heat loss through walls, windows, or insulation
  • Design heating and cooling systems
  • Select insulation materials and thicknesses
  • Analyse thermal performance of building envelopes

This formula applies to steady-state conduction through flat surfaces.

For cylindrical objects (like pipes), a modified version using logarithmic terms is needed.


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