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Kilowatt per Square Meter [kW/m²]


The unit kilowatt per square meter (kW/m²) measures heat flux density or radiant flux, representing the amount of energy transferred per unit area per unit time, scaled to kilowatts. One kilowatt equals 1000 watts, so 1 kW/m² = 1000 J of energy passing through 1 square meter every second.


This unit is widely used in solar energy, fire safety engineering, and high-intensity thermal applications to quantify power delivered per area. Typical applications include:



  • Solar concentrators and photovoltaic panels: assessing the intensity of sunlight on a surface



  • Fire testing: measuring heat flux from flames or radiative heaters



  • Industrial processes: calculating energy input in furnaces or reactors



Mathematically, heat flux is expressed as:


q=QAtq = \frac{Q}{A \cdot t}

where q is heat flux in kW/m², Q is energy in kilojoules, A is area in square meters, and t is time in seconds.


For reference, direct sunlight at noon on a clear day provides roughly 1 kW/m² at the Earth’s surface.


kW/m² is an SI-derived unit and is convenient for large-scale energy calculations, replacing older units like Btu/ft²·h or cal/cm²·s. It provides a straightforward way to assess power per unit area in engineering and environmental applications.




Calorie (IT) per Second per Square Centimeter [cal(IT)/(s·cm²)]


The unit calorie (IT) per second per square centimeter, written as cal(IT)/(s·cm²), measures heat flux density or power per unit area. It represents the amount of International Table calories (1 cal(IT) = 4.1868 J) transferred through 1 cm² of surface every second.


This unit is often used in laboratory-scale heat transfer experiments, solar energy studies, and radiation measurements, especially when dealing with small surface areas where the calorie is convenient. Applications include:



  • Measuring solar energy intensity on small surfaces



  • Calorimetry experiments on samples



  • Laser or focused radiation studies



The heat flux can be expressed mathematically as:


q=QAtq = \frac{Q}{A \cdot t}

where q is heat flux in cal(IT)/(s·cm²), Q is energy in calories, A is area in cm², and t is time in seconds.


Conversion to SI units:


1cal(IT)/(s\cdotpcm²)41868W/m²1 \, \text{cal(IT)/(s·cm²)} \approx 41868 \, \text{W/m²}

While W/m² is the SI standard, cal(IT)/(s·cm²) is convenient for small-area, high-intensity heat measurements in laboratory or historical contexts.



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