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In heat transfer, the thermal conductivity of a substance, k, is an intensive property that indicates its ability to conduct heat.
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 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acrylic Glass (Plexiglas V045i) |
0.2n |
|||
| Air | 0.024d - 0.025e - 0.0262a | 273d - 293e - 300a | 3.333 × 10-61 | (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 | 402 | 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) |
| 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 | |
| Rice hulls (whole) | 5.19j | |||
| 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 | 5×(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 |
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 (July 2005). "Thermal conductivity in advanced chips — Emerging generation of thermal greases offers advantages". Advanced Packaging: pp.2–4, http://www.apmag.com/. Retrieved on 4 March 2008.
- n Plexiglas.com
- z EngineeringToolbox.com
Thermal conductivity of air as a function of temperature can be found at James Ierardi's Fire Protection Engineering Site
- ^ Frequently Asked Questions About Forest Lightning - Forest Fire in Canada - The Earth's Electrical Structure
- ^ Alumina ( Al2O3 ) - Physical, Mechanical, Thermal, Electrical and Chemical Properties - Supplier Dat
See also
Wikipedia content modification information:
- This page was last modified on 10 November 2008, at 07:16.
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