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To: Ali Chen who wrote (21463)12/4/2000 2:57:03 PM
From: Daniel SchuhRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 275872
 
Ali, I would have assumed that the conversion was a simple cm/ meter thing, I know that watts are watts and degrees K = degrees C for the purpose of this constant. But how do you get from 0.835 w/cm-C at 25 degrees C (that from Handbook of Chem. &Phys, also approximately Pete's #) to 148 W/m-K 300 degrees K? The two temperatures are pretty darn close, and the two values are off by something not real close to a factor of 100.

Cheers, Dan.