Thermal diffusivity


In heat transfer analysis, thermal diffusivity is the thermal conductivity divided by density and specific heat capacity at constant pressure. It measures the rate of transfer of heat of a material from the hot end to the cold end. It has the SI derived unit of m²/s. Thermal diffusivity is usually denoted α but a,h,κ, K, and D are also used. The formula
is:
where
Together, can be considered the volumetric heat capacity.
As seen in the heat equation,
one way to view thermal diffusivity is as the ratio of the time derivative of temperature to its curvature, quantifying the rate at which temperature concavity is "smoothed out". In a sense, thermal diffusivity is the measure of thermal inertia. In a substance with high thermal diffusivity, heat moves rapidly through it because the substance conducts heat quickly relative to its volumetric heat capacity or 'thermal bulk'.
Thermal diffusivity is often measured with the flash method. It involves heating a strip or cylindrical sample with a short energy pulse at one end and analyzing the temperature change a short distance away.
MaterialThermal diffusivity
Refs.
Pyrolytic graphite, parallel to layers1220
Silver, pure 165.63
Gold127
Copper at 25 °C111
Aluminium97
Al-10Si-Mn-Mg at 20 °C74.2
Aluminium 6061-T6 Alloy64
Al-5Mg-2Si-Mn at 20 °C44.0
Steel, AISI 1010 18.8
Steel, 1% carbon11.72
Steel, stainless 304A at 27 °C4.2
Steel, stainless 310 at 25 °C3.352
Inconel 600 at 25 °C3.428
Molybdenum at 25 °C54.3
Iron23
Silicon88
Quartz1.4
Carbon/carbon composite at 25 °C216.5
Aluminium oxide 12.0
Silicon Dioxide 0.83
Si3 N4 with CNTs 26 °C9.142
Si3 N4 without CNTs 26 °C8.605
PC at 25 °C0.144
PP at 25 °C0.096
Paraffin at 25 °C0.081
PVC 0.08
PTFE at 25 °C0.124
Water at 25 °C0.143
Ice at 0 °C1.02
Alcohol0.07
Water vapour 23.38
Air 19
Argon 22
Helium 190
Hydrogen 160
Nitrogen 22
Pyrolytic graphite, normal to layers3.6
Sandstone1.15
Tin40
Brick, common0.52
Brick, adobe0.27
Glass, window0.34
Rubber0.089 - 0.13
Nylon0.09
Wood 0.082
Oil, engine 0.0738