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thermal conductivity
(redirected from conductivity)

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thermal conductivity

Ability of a substance to conduct heat. Good thermal conductors, like good electrical conductors, are generally materials with many free electrons, such as metals. A poor conductor, called an insulator, has low conductivity.

Thermal conductivity is expressed in units of joules per second per metre per kelvin (J s−1 m−1 K−1). For a block of material of cross-sectional area a and length l, with temperatures T1 and T2 at its end faces, the thermal conductivity λ equals Hl/at(T 2T1), where H is the amount of heat transferred in time t.



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Electrical conductivity is achieved with metal coated fillers.
New Series 700 and 800 compounds reportedly allow for much better control and reproducibility of conductivity than does carbon black alone.
In contrast, tests of 40-nm wires made of tin, of 70-nm zinc wires, and 40-nm zinc wires sandwiched between lead electrodes, found that the usual conductivity rules prevailed.
 
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