This document contains data and graphs comparing the surface temperatures of flat, pinned, and finned metal plates when exposed to varying air velocities and heater temperatures. As air velocity increases from 0 to 1.5 m/s, the surface temperature of all plate types decreases due to increased convection, with finned plates experiencing the greatest temperature drop. Graphs also show finned and pinned plates maintaining lower surface temperatures than flat plates across different air velocities and heater temperatures.
This document contains data and graphs comparing the surface temperatures of flat, pinned, and finned metal plates when exposed to varying air velocities and heater temperatures. As air velocity increases from 0 to 1.5 m/s, the surface temperature of all plate types decreases due to increased convection, with finned plates experiencing the greatest temperature drop. Graphs also show finned and pinned plates maintaining lower surface temperatures than flat plates across different air velocities and heater temperatures.
This document contains data and graphs comparing the surface temperatures of flat, pinned, and finned metal plates when exposed to varying air velocities and heater temperatures. As air velocity increases from 0 to 1.5 m/s, the surface temperature of all plate types decreases due to increased convection, with finned plates experiencing the greatest temperature drop. Graphs also show finned and pinned plates maintaining lower surface temperatures than flat plates across different air velocities and heater temperatures.