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casebrew said:Heat moves via three methods. Conductivity, directly form one substance to the other. Convection, due to currents in the fluid. And Radiation, emission/emissability is how it is measured. Thermography being the measure of radiated heat, via emissibility.
Propane heats our kettles via conduction. The Wort picks up the heat from the kettle via conduction as well as convection. The kettle gives off heat via Emission. SO, a black kettle would give off heat faster. Like a radiator, or the cooling fins on a black motorcycle cylinder. As far as heating more efficiently due to black coatings, it would depend on how much of propane's heat is via radiation, and how much you would lose to the air via outward radiation. The .04 vs .765 is a ratio of 19 times. I suspect that improving the radative perfomance by 19 times won't mean squat if propane heat is transmitted via conduction at a rate 600 times (a number I picked out of my tu-tu) more than via radiation.
Of course, when you are in a high performance positon where weight and size have limitations, black motorcycle parts could be important. A couple percent could be important to a racer. But notice that they do have fins, to increase conductive area. Plus airflow, to increase convection. NOT a smooth cylinder painted black? I'd say the same reasons apply to heating a kettle- heat transfer via radiation is minor compared to conduction and convection.
Electric heat may be different, the red element radiates a real storm. But is also close enough to the pot to cause convection and conduction to the air, then conduction/convection air-to-pot.
Hmmm. google more.
A litle more googling points out that a "reflector" would be heated by conduction, but 'radiate' heat back at the kettle.
A little more googling tells me that 10-15% of a gas flame's heat is radiative. (Apparently, from the CO2 and H2O molecules being heated to incandesence.)
But since radiation goes off in all directions, only a small part of the 10-15% is aimed at the kettle. Let's say 1/3? So, different surfaces could collect the more heat at: 1/3 of 15% is 5%, times .o4,(if polished) give .2% of your propanes heat radiated to the usual pot. Or 1/3 of 15%= 5%, times .765(black anodised pot) = 3.8% of your fires heat. But if you add a reflector to your 'stove', you could double that, and gain 7% more efficiency . You could anodise a kettle, build a reflector, and save 10 cents per batch... ooops, I forgot to allow for the heat radiated away from your black kettle.... more surface area away from the flame than towards it... no gain? ooo, bigger reflector? noooo, wait, the wort won't be heated to incandesence, so not much radiation?.... ah, I've done enough larnin' and thinking for 10 cents/batch....
But, then, if you built a solar 100% radiation) brew pot....
Jester4176 said:So you're saying that the absorbative net loss of the conductive reflection relative to the convection within the pot would be null?![]()
I have another solution. Joe can report back with his findings, or I'll offer to do the esperiment. I have a double burner stand and 2 keggles. I can adjust the flame on each burner to have the exact same output. Then, I can put one keggle on each burner(after painting one on the bottom), and fill each with 5 gallons of water(premeasured). Then, set a timer on each in a semi closed garage(door cracked with fan blowing noxious CO vapors out) to negate the effect of wind on the burners, and see which boils first. What say the board?
Jester4176 said:So you're saying that the absorbative net loss of the conductive reflection relative to the convection within the pot would be null?![]()
I have another solution. Joe can report back with his findings, or I'll offer to do the esperiment. I have a double burner stand and 2 keggles. I can adjust the flame on each burner to have the exact same output. Then, I can put one keggle on each burner(after painting one on the bottom), and fill each with 5 gallons of water(premeasured). Then, set a timer on each in a semi closed garage(door cracked with fan blowing noxious CO vapors out) to negate the effect of wind on the burners, and see which boils first. What say the board?