This book aims at a theoretical and practical treatment of both
conduction and induction heating. They share a common theory, one being
the 'mirror image' of the other, and so one gets two for the price of
one.
The book comprises four parts: conduction theory, induction theory, heat
flow and practice.
Modern induction practice is treated in four big chapters - through
heating, surface heating, special applications and metal melting. In
addition, there is a smaller chapter on conduction heating. Although, at
first sight, this might seem a lot of theory, the practical chapters
make up half of the book and the theory itself is practically oriented.
Throughout, the emphasis is on fundamentals and understanding, usually
starting from first principles, with plenty of worked examples. Much of
the theory is new, being either presented differently or solving new
problems. Most of the Direct Resistance Heating is new.
There are new approaches to tube heating, both for DRH and induction;
these show clearly the relationship to the solid solution. There are
also chapters on saturation and the effect of permeability.
This is a book that should be invaluable to engineers and technicians,
designers and users. It will be useful to students studying either the
theory of the heating process or its practice. The mathematics is not
difficult and SI units are used throughout.