Drvna industrija, Vol. 65 No. 2, 2014.
Review article
https://doi.org/10.5552/drind.2014.1333
Specific Heat Capacity of Wood
Kristijan Radmanović
; Faculty of Forestry, University of Zagreb, Croatia
Igor Đukić
; Faculty of Forestry, University of Zagreb, Croatia
Stjepan Pervan
; Faculty of Forestry, University of Zagreb, Croatia
Abstract
Specific heat capacity is defined as the amount of heat that a kilogram of a given substance is required to absorb in order to increase its temperature by one degree. The temperature of a given substance can change either at constant pressure or at constant volume, so we differentiate between specific heat capacity at constant pressure (cp) and specific heat capacity at constant volume (cv). When doing research into the heat properties of wood, the quantity that most frequently remains constant is pressure, thus restricting our study on specific heat capacity to cp. This paper provides an overview of the research that has so far been carried out into the specific heat capacity of wood depending on the temperature and moisture content. An analytical and graphical comparison has been performed of the results published in the Wood Industry Manual (1967) (DIP), Wood Handbook (1999) (WH) and work published by Deliiski (2012) (DEL).
Keywords
specific heat capacity; wood; moisture content; temperature
Hrčak ID:
123172
URI
Publication date:
18.6.2014.
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