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This introduction to heat transfer offers advanced undergraduate and graduate engineering students a solid foundation in the subjects of conduction, convection, radiation, and phase-change, in addition to the related topic of mass transfer. A staple of engineering courses around the world for almost four decades, it has been revised and updated regularly by the authors, recognized experts in the field. The text addresses the implications, limitations, and meanings of many aspects of heat transfer, connecting the subject to its real-world applications and developing students' insight into related phenomena. Three introductory chapters form a minicourse in heat transfer, covering all of the subjects discussed in detail in subsequent chapters. This unique and effective feature introduces heat exchangers early in the development, rather than at the end. The authors also present a novel and simplified method for dimensional analysis, and they capitalize on the similarity of natural convection and film condensation to develop these two topics in a parallel manner. Worked examples and end-of-chapter exercises appear throughout the book, along with well-drawn, illuminating figures.
As a professor teaching heat transfer courses, I reference this book often. Compared to other textbooks we often use, this textbook provides better historical context, more application-ready properties, and more practical examples. It has more detail on heat exchanger design and mass transfer than many alternatives, with sufficient detail to make a good textbook for graduate convection courses too. The appendix information is pretty helpful too. Notably, a past review mentions no “thermal resistance” in the index, but it’s there on page 770 with 13 subentries. Given that review’s focus on the solution’s manual, it makes me wonder how legitimately they were working in their class or even reading the book!