Measurement of the thermal conductivity of helium up to 2100°K by the column method

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Abstract

The thermal conductivity of helium was measured at atmospheric pressure in the range 800-2100°K by the column method. The data could be correlated by the polynomial = 0.635 × 10-1 +0.310 × 10-3 T-0.244 × 10-7 T2, where λ is in watts per meters degrees Kelvin and T is in degrees Kelvin. The results obtained were compared with previous thermal conductivity measurements. The data of Desmond and Saxena and Saxena agree closely with the present results; the data of Timrot and Umanskii appear to be too low and those of Blais and Mann too high. Values for f= λ/ηCv, computed using measured thermal conductivities and available viscosity data, were found to agree well with classical results from kinetic theory.

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Faubert, F. M., Springer, G. S., & Michigan. (1973). Measurement of the thermal conductivity of helium up to 2100°K by the column method. The Journal of Chemical Physics, 4080–4083. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1678965

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