Abo Bibliothek: Guest
Computational Thermal Sciences: An International Journal

Erscheint 6 Ausgaben pro Jahr

ISSN Druckformat: 1940-2503

ISSN Online: 1940-2554

The Impact Factor measures the average number of citations received in a particular year by papers published in the journal during the two preceding years. 2017 Journal Citation Reports (Clarivate Analytics, 2018) IF: 1.5 To calculate the five year Impact Factor, citations are counted in 2017 to the previous five years and divided by the source items published in the previous five years. 2017 Journal Citation Reports (Clarivate Analytics, 2018) 5-Year IF: 1 The Immediacy Index is the average number of times an article is cited in the year it is published. The journal Immediacy Index indicates how quickly articles in a journal are cited. Immediacy Index: 0.3 The Eigenfactor score, developed by Jevin West and Carl Bergstrom at the University of Washington, is a rating of the total importance of a scientific journal. Journals are rated according to the number of incoming citations, with citations from highly ranked journals weighted to make a larger contribution to the eigenfactor than those from poorly ranked journals. Eigenfactor: 0.00017 The Journal Citation Indicator (JCI) is a single measurement of the field-normalized citation impact of journals in the Web of Science Core Collection across disciplines. The key words here are that the metric is normalized and cross-disciplinary. JCI: 0.28 SJR: 0.279 SNIP: 0.544 CiteScore™:: 2.5 H-Index: 22

Indexed in

A ROLE FOR COMPUTATIONAL HEAT TRANSFER (CHT) IN ENGINEERING EDUCATION

Volumen 4, Ausgabe 6, 2012, pp. 477-484
DOI: 10.1615/ComputThermalScien.2012006430
Get accessGet access

ABSTRAKT

Traditional engineering education has two main aspects, theoretical and experimental; of which the first also has two parts: quantitative formulation of the relevant general laws of science; and deduction of their implications, in particular, practical circumstances. The deductions are conducted by mathematical methods in which differential calculus plays a large part. Students lacking proficiency in such methods are not admitted to engineering schools. Differential calculus applies the laws of science to infinitesimal volumes, and it expresses its deductions in terms of pretabulated functions. Only rarely does reality conform to them well enough for use in design, without large safety factors. Computer-based analysis applies the laws to finite volumes with fewer oversimplifications. Its deductions conform to reality more closely; so safety factors can be closer to unity; with great economic advantage. It is argued that these facts should be reflected in both the admission procedures and the teaching methods of engineering education. In respect to the second, detailed suggestions are made, exemplified by application to heat-exchanger theory.

REFERENZEN
  1. Kays, W. and London, A. L. , Compact Heat Exchangers.

  2. Patankar, S. V. and Spalding, D. B. , Calculation procedure for transient and steady state behaviour of shell and tube heat exchangers, in 5th ICHMT seminar.

  3. Spalding, D. B. , Teaching heat transfer and fluid flow by means of CFD.

Zukünftige Artikel

Positivity Preserving Analysis of Central Schemes for Compressible Euler Equations Souren Misra, Alok Patra, Santosh Kumar Panda A lattice Boltzmann study of nano-magneto-hydrodynamic flow with heat transfer and entropy generation over a porous backward facing-step channel Hassane NAJI, Hammouda Sihem, Hacen Dhahri A Commemorative Volume in Memory of Darrell Pepper David Carrington, Yogesh Jaluria, Akshai Runchal In Memoriam: Professor Darrell W. Pepper – A Tribute to an Exceptional Engineering Educator and Researcher Akshai K. Runchal, David Carrington, SA Sherif, Wilson K. S. Chiu, Jon P. Longtin, Francine Battaglia, Yongxin Tao, Yogesh Jaluria, Michael W. Plesniak, James F. Klausner, Vish Prasad, Alain J. Kassab, John R. Lloyd, Yelena Shafeyeva, Wayne Strasser, Lorenzo Cremaschi, Tom Shih, Tarek Abdel-Salam, Ryoichi S. Amano, Ashwani K. Gupta, Nesrin Ozalp, Ting Wang, Kevin R. Anderson, Suresh Aggarwal, Sumanta Acharya, Farzad Mashayek, Efstathios E. Michaelides, Bhupendra Khandelwal, Xiuling Wang, Shima Hajimirza, Kevin Dowding, Sandip Mazumder, Eduardo Divo, Rod Douglass, Roy E. Hogan, Glen Hansen, Steven Beale, Perumal Nithiarasu, Surya Pratap Vanka, Renato M. Cotta, John A. Reizes, Victoria Timchenko, Ashoke De, Keith A Woodbury, John Tencer, Aaron P. Wemhoff, G.F. ‘Jerry’ Jones, Leitao Chen, Timothy S. Fisher, Sandra K. S. Boetcher, Patrick H. Oosthuizen, Hamidreza Najafi, Brent W. Webb, Satwindar S. Sadhal, Amanie Abdelmessih Modeling of Two-Phase Gas-Liquid Slug Flows in Microchannels Ayyoub Mehdizadeh Momen, SA Sherif, William E. Lear Performance of two dimensional planar curved micronozzle used for gas separation Manu K Sukesan, Shine SR A Localized Meshless Method for Transient Heat Conduction with Applications Kyle Beggs, Eduardo Divo, Alain J. Kassab Non-nested Multilevel Acceleration of Meshless Solution of Heat Conduction in Complex Domains Anand Radhakrishnan, Michael Xu, Shantanu Shahane, Surya P Vanka Assessing the Viability of High-Capacity Photovoltaic Power Plants in Diverse Climatic Zones : A Technical, Economic, and Environmental Analysis Kadir Özbek, Kadir Gelis, Ömer Özyurt MACHINE LEARNING LOCAL WALL STEAM CONDENSATION MODEL IN PRESENCE OF NON-CONDENSABLE FROM TUBE DATA Pavan Sharma LES of Humid Air Natural Convection in Cavity with Conducting Walls Hadi Ahmadi moghaddam, Svetlana Tkachenko, John Reizes, Guan Heng Yeoh, Victoria Timchenko
Digitales Portal Digitale Bibliothek eBooks Zeitschriften Referenzen und Berichte Forschungssammlungen Preise und Aborichtlinien Begell House Kontakt Language English 中文 Русский Português German French Spain