List of thermal conductivities

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In physics, thermal conductivity, k, is the intensive property of a material that indicates its ability to conduct heat.

First, we define heat conduction by the formula:

H=\frac{\Delta Q}{\Delta t}=k\times A\times\frac{\Delta T}{x}

where \frac{\Delta Q}{\Delta t} is the rate of heat flow, k is the thermal conductivity, A is the total surface area of conducting surface, ΔT is temperature difference and x is the thickness of conducting surface separating the 2 temperatures.

Thus, rearranging the equation gives thermal conductivity,

k=\frac{\Delta Q}{\Delta t}\times\frac{1}{A}\times\frac{x}{\Delta T}

(Note: \frac{\Delta T}{x} is the temperature gradient)

This list makes up the data for the smaller list provided in Thermal conductivity.

Please note that mixtures may have variable thermal conductivities due to its composition.

Material Thermal conductivity (W·m−1·K−1) Temperature (K) Electrical conductivity @ 293 K (Ω−1·m−1) Notes
Air 0.024d - 0.025e - 0.0262a 273d - 293e - 300a 3.333 × 10-6[1] (N+21%O+0.93%Ar+0.04%CO2)

(1 atm)

Alcohols OR Oils 0.1e - 0.21e 293e
Aluminium, pure 205d - 220f - 237egi 293egi 37.45g - 37.74i × 106
Aluminium nitride 170m
Alumina, pure 40[2] 293
Beryllium oxide

218m

Brass Cu63% 125g 296g 12.82g - 21.74g × 106 (Cu63%,Zn37%)
Brass Cu70% 109 ~ 121g 296g 12.82g - 21.74g × 106 (Cu70%,Zn30%)
Bronze 26f
42 ~ 50g

296g

5.882g - 7.143g × 106
Sn25%
(Cu89%,Sn11%)f
Cast iron 55f (Fe+(2-4)%C+(1-3)%Si)
Carbon steel 36f - 50.2d - 54f (Fe+(1.5-0.5)%C)
Concrete 0.8d - 1.28e 293e ~61-67%CaO
Copper, pure 386.0z
368.7
353.1
279z
559
859
59.17g - 59.59i × 106 IACS pure =1.7×10-8Ω•m

=58.82×106Ω-1•m-1

Cork 0.04d - 0.07e 293e
Diamond, pure synthetic 2000i-2500i 293i (Lateral)10−16 i - (Ballistic)108+ i (>99.9%12C)
Diamond, impure 1000ad 273a ~ 293d ~10−16 i Type I (98.1% of Gem Diamonds)

(C+0.1%N)

Expanded polystyrene 0.033ad - ((PS Only)0.1 - 0.13g) 98a-298a-296g <10−14 g - 100 g (PS+Air+CO2+CnH2n+x)
Fiberglass OR Foam OR Wool 0.03e - 0.04d - 0.045e 293e
Glass 0.8d−0.93e((96%SiO2)1.2-1.4g) 293eg 10−14 - 10−12 g - 10−10 <1% Iron oxides
Glycerol 0.29e 293e
Gold, pure 314d - 318fgi 300gi 45.17i - 45.45g × 106
Granite 1.73b - 3.98b (72%SiO2+14%Al2O3+4%K2O etc.)
Ice 1.6d - 2.1e - 2.2a 293e - 273a
Iron, pure 71.8f - 79.5d - 80.2a - 80.4gi 300agi 9.901g - 10.41i × 106
Marble 2.07b - 2.94b Mostly CaCO3
Limestone 1.26b - 1.33b Mostly CaCO3
Lead, pure 34.7d
35.0f
35.3gi
293d
f
300gi
4.808i - 4.854g × 106
Nitrogen, pure 0.0234d - 0.02583i - 0.026a 293d - 300ai (N2) (1 atm)
Oxygen, pure 0.0238d - 0.02658i 293d - 300i (O2) (1 atm)
Plastic, fiber-reinforced 0.23g - 0.7g - 1.06e 296g - 293e 10−15 g - 100 g 10-40%GF or CF
Polymer, High-Density 0.33g - 0.52g 296g 10−16 g - 102 g
Polymer, Low-density 0.04g - 0.16e - 0.25e - 0.33g 296g - 293e 10−17 g - 100 g
Rubber (92%) 0.16a 303a ~10−13
Sandstone 1.83b - 2.90b ~95-71%SiO2
Snow, dry 0.11d
Silica Aerogel 0.003a-0.004i-0.008k-0.017k-0.03i 98a - 298a Foamed Glass
Silicon dioxide, pure 1m
Silver, pure 406d - 418f - 429agi 300agi 61.35g - 63.01i × 106 Highest electrical conductivity of any metal
Soil 0.17c - 1.13c composition may vary
Stainless steel 16.3g 296g 1.389g - 1.429g × 106 AISI 302(Fe,Cr18%,Ni8%)
Steel(normal) 50.2d 293d
Titanium, pure 15.6f - 21.9gi 300gi 1.852g - 2.381i × 106
Titanium Alloy 5.8g 296g 0.595g × 106 (Ti+6%Al+4%V)
Thermal grease, silver-based 2i - 3i
Water 0.6de 293de (Pure)10−6 i -(Sweet)10−3±1 i -(Sea)1i <3%(NaCl+MgCl2+CaCl2)
Wood, +>=12% water 0.09091h - 0.16a - 0.21h - 0.4e 298a - 293e Species-Variableh
Wood, oven-dry 0.04d - 0.07692h - 0.12d - 0.17h Cedarh - Hickoryh
Zinc oxide 21m
Material Thermal conductivity (W·m−1·K−1) Temperature (K) Electrical conductivity @ 293 K (Ω−1·m−1) Notes

[edit] References

a CRC handbook of chemistry and physics (subscription is required to access the data)
b Marble Institute of America (2 values are usually given: the highest and lowest test scores)
c Soil Sci Journals
d HyperPhysics, also from Young, Hugh D., University Physics, 7th Ed. Table 15-5. (data from HyperPhysics should be all at 20oC)
e Hukseflux Thermal Sensors
f Engineers Edge
g GoodFellow
h Physical Properties and Moisture Relations of Wood
i Other listings within Wikipedia references (this table may not be cited, pure elements are sourced from Chemical elements data references, otherwise an in-table linked-page must list the relevant references)
j Clarity requires that no reference is to use this letter
k Thermal Properties - Silica Aerogels
l [1] Machinery's Handbook - properties of materials p404]
m Greg Becker, Chris Lee, and Zuchen Lin (Jul 2005). "Thermal conductivity in advanced chips — Emerging generation of thermal greases offers advantages". Advanced Packaging: pp.2–4. 
z EngineeringToolbox.com

Heat Conduction Calculator

Thermal conductivity of air as a function of temperature can be found at James Ierardi's Fire Protection Engineering Site

  1. ^ Frequently Asked Questions About Forest Lightning - Forest Fire in Canada - The Earth's Electrical Structure
  2. ^ Alumina ( Al2O3 ) - Physical, Mechanical, Thermal, Electrical and Chemical Properties - Supplier Dat

[edit] See also