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Animal Environment & Heat Flow

Animal Environment & Heat Flow. BSE 2294 Animal Structures and Environments S. Christian Mariger Ph.D. & Susan W. Gay Ph.D. Environmental Fundamentals. Environment is the total of all external conditions that effect the development, response and growth of plants and animals.

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Animal Environment & Heat Flow

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  1. Animal Environment & Heat Flow BSE 2294 Animal Structures and Environments S. Christian Mariger Ph.D. & Susan W. Gay Ph.D.

  2. Environmental Fundamentals • Environment is the total of all external conditions that effect the development, response and growth of plants and animals. • Physical factors • Social factors • Thermal factors • Ventilation is the method of environmental modification for agricultural structures.

  3. Physical Factors • Space • Lighting • Sound • Gasses • Equipment

  4. Social Factors • Number of animals to a pen • Behavior

  5. Thermal Factors • Air temperature • Relative humidity • Air movement • Radiation (one type of heat transfer)

  6. Environmental Factors • Influence: • Animal health • Breeding • Production efficiency • Product quality • Human health • Equipment service life • Building material longevity

  7. Heating and Ventilation Terms • Heat – the energy transferred from a warmer body to a colder body because of the temperature difference • Temperature – is a measure of a body’s ability to transfer or receive heat from matter in contact with it. • Ambient temperature - the temperature of the medium surrounding a body • British Thermal Unit (Btu) – the quantity of heat required to raise one pound of water one °F

  8. Heating and Ventilation Terms • Calorie – the quantity of heat required to raise one gram of water one °C • Specific heat – is the quantity of heat required to raise one pound of material one °F (Units = Btu/lb-°F) • Sensible heat – is a measure of the energy that accompanies temperature change • Latent heat – is the heat energy absorbed or released when a material changes phase (ice to water for example)

  9. Sensible and latent heat to change one lb of water from ice to steam qs = McvΔT

  10. Sensible & latent heat example • Given a 20 cubic foot water trough that was allowed to freeze to 28° F how many Btu will be required to thaw and warm the water to 40° F.

  11. Sensible & latent heat example • Find lbs of water. • ρH2O = 62.4 lb/ft3 • 20 ft3 x 62.4 lb/ft3 = 1,248 lbs

  12. Sensible & latent heat example • Find sensible heat required (Btu) to raise the temp from 28° F to 32° F. • Specific heat of ice = 0.56 Btu/lb - 1° F • 1,248 lbs x 0.56 Btu/lb - 1° F = 699 Btu - 1° F • (32° F – 28° F) x 699 Btu - 1° F = 2,796 Btu

  13. Sensible & latent heat example • Find the latent heat of fusion for the water. • Latent heat of fusion H2O = 144 Btu/lb • 1,248 lbs x 144 Btu/lb = 179,712 Btu

  14. Sensible & latent heat example • Find sensible heat required to raise the temp from 32° F to 40° F. • Specific heat of water = 1.0 Btu/lb - 1° F • 1,248 lbs x 1.0 Btu/lb - 1° F = 1,248 Btu - 1° F • (40° F – 32° F) x 1,248 Btu - 1° F = 9,984 Btu

  15. Sensible & latent heat example • Sum the Btu’s to find the energy required to raise the temp from 32° F to 40° F. • (32° F – 28° F) = 2,796 Btu • Latent heat of fusion = 179,712 Btu • (40° F – 32° F) = 9,984 Btu • Total = 192,492 Btu

  16. Types of Heat Transfer

  17. Conduction • Conduction – the exchange of heat between contacting bodies that are at different temperatures or transfer of energy through a material as a result of a temperature gradient. Conduction is often a heat loss factor as well as a heating factor!

  18. Conduction heat flow • q = AK (T1 – T2) / L • A = cross-sectional area of the surface • K = thermal conductivity • L = thickness of the material • T1 – T2 = ΔT = change in temperature • q = (A/R) ΔT • R = thermal resistance (L/K)

  19. Conduction example • Determine the heat transfer through a wall composed of two sheets of ½” plywood (R = 0.62) and 3 ½” of batt insulation (R = 11). Inside temp = 80° F Outside temp = 20° F Assume the cross-sectional area “A” is 1ft2

  20. Conduction example • Find RT for the wall: • Material #1 ½” plywood R = 0.62 • Material #2 3 ½” batt insulation R = 11.00 • Material #3 ½” plywood R = 0.62 RT = 12.24

  21. Conduction example • Find q for the wall: • q = (A/RT) x (Tinside – Toutside) • q = (1ft2/12.24) x (80 – 20) = 4.90 Btu/Hour

  22. Heat conduction for a building (qb) • Calculate the conduction (q) for each building component: • Ceilings qc - Windows qwi • Doors qd - Walls qw • Etc. • Add all the conductions to find the conduction for the building (qb) qb = qc + qwi + qd + qw + q...... (in Btu/hr)

  23. Conduction temperature change • We can also calculate the temperature from one side to the next for each layer in the wall. • Determine the temperatures at points 2 and 3. • Where T1 – T2 = (q/A) R R1 = 0.62 R3 = 0.62 R2 = 11 T1 = 80° F T2 = ? T3 = ? T4 = 20° F

  24. Conduction temperature change • Temp at point 2 • T2 = T1 – (q/A) R1 • T2 = 80° F – (4.9/1) x 0.62 = 77° F • Temp at point 3 • T3 = T2 – (q/A) R2 . • T3 = 77° F – (4.9/1) x 11.0 = 23° F

  25. Convection • Heat transferred to or from a body by mass movement of either a liquid or a gas

  26. Convection • Convection is often used for interior heating

  27. Radiation • The exchange of thermal energy between objects by electromagnetic waves. • Radiant energy is transferred between two bodies in both directions, not just from warmer to cooler.

  28. Radiation • Here is an example of infra red (IR) radiation being used in an interior heating application

  29. Typical Environmental Effects (dairy cattle example)

  30. Heat stress occurs in animals when their heat gain is greater than their heat loss. Body heat Metabolism Physical activity Performance Environment Radiation (sun) Convection (air) Conduction (resting surface)

  31. Heat stress has a severe impact on cow performance and health. Increases Respiration rate Sweating Water intake Decreases Dry matter intake Feed passage rate Blood flow to internal organs Milk production Reproduction performance

  32. Cows are much more comfortable at cooler temperatures than humans. Thermal comfort zone 41 – 77 °F Lower critical temperature Neonatal calves 55 °F Mature cows 13 °F Upper critical temperature 77 – 78 °F

  33. Animals can lose heat by sensible or latent heat losses. Sensible heat Conduction (direct contact) Convection (air movement) Radiation (line of sight) Latent heat Evaporation (phase change)

  34. As air temperatures increase, animals cannot lose as much sensible heat, so they pant and sweat (evaporation). Direct radiation Indirect radiation Convection Indirect radiation Conduction Digestive heat

  35. As relative humidity rises, an animal losses less heat by evaporation. Evaporation (from skin) Evaporation (respiratory tract)

  36. Relative Humidity (%) 100 80 60 40 20 0 72 No Stress 80 Mild Stress 90 Heat Stress Temperature(F) Severe Stress 100 110 Dead Cows 120

  37. How can you tell if a cow is suffering from heat stress? Rectal temperatures Above 102.5 °F Respiration rates > 80 breaths per minute Decreases in Dry matter intake Milk production

  38. How can heat stress be managed? Shade Air exchange Air velocity Water

  39. Shade lowers the solar heat load from direct and, sometimes, indirect radiation.

  40. Good air exchange or ventilation of confinement housing is essential to animal comfort. Removes Hot, moist air Increases Convective heat loss Recommended 1000 cfm per cow

  41. Cows’ cooling ability is improved by increasing the air velocity over the animal’s skin. Removes Hot, moist air in contact with the animal Turbulence Disrupt the boundary layer Recommended 220 to 440 fpm (2.5 to 5 mph)

  42. Water improves animal cooling through evaporation. Watering locations Increase in hot weather Sprinkling systems Wet cow’s hide Increase direct evaporation Evaporative cooling pads Cools air directly Cows cooled by convection

  43. Thermal effects on other species

  44. Heat Balance

  45. Heat balance • To maintain constant room temperature, heat produced by the animals and heaters must equal the heat lost through the building structure and by ventilation. • Heat gain (Qh) = Heat loss (QT): • Qf + Qs = Qvent + Qb

  46. Heat removed by ventilation (Qvent) • Ventilation removes heat by replacing warm in side air with cold outside air. • If humidity is constant we know the specific heat of air. • If we also know the difference between the outside temp and the inside temp (Δt) • If we also know how much air is being exchanged in Cubic Feet/Minute (cfm) • Then we can calculate the heat removed by ventilation.

  47. Heat removed by ventilation (Qvent) Qvent = (1.1)(Fan rate cfm)(Δt)

  48. Ventilation (Qvent) example • A building is ventilated at 1,200 cfm. The inside temperature is 65° F and the outside temperature is 15° F. Determine the rate of heat removal.

  49. Ventilation (Qvent) example • (Qvent) = (1.1) (fan rate) (Ti – To) • (Qvent) = (1.1) (1,200) (65 – 15) • (Qvent) = 66,000 Btu/hour

  50. Heat lost through the structure (Qb) • We have discussed heat lost through structure in terms of thermal resistance (R) and thermal conductivity (K). • Q = AK (T1 – T2) / L • A = cross-sectional area of the surface • K = thermal conductivity • L = thickness of the material • T1 – T2 = Δt = change in temperature • Q = (A/R) Δt • R = thermal resistance (L/K) • Qb = qc + qwi + qd + qw + q......

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