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Thermal Expansion Formula

Calculate linear thermal expansion using ΔL = αL₀ΔT.
Predict how materials expand or contract with temperature changes.

The Formula

ΔL = α × L₀ × ΔT

This formula calculates how much a material's length changes when its temperature changes.

Most materials expand when heated and contract when cooled.

The amount of expansion depends on the material's thermal expansion coefficient.

Variables

SymbolMeaning
ΔLChange in length (metres, m)
αCoefficient of linear thermal expansion (per °C or per K)
L₀Original length (metres, m)
ΔTChange in temperature (°C or K)

Common Expansion Coefficients

Materialα (× 10⁻⁶ per °C)
Steel12
Aluminium23
Copper17
Concrete12
Glass8.5

Example 1

A 10 m steel bridge beam is heated from 15°C to 45°C. How much does it expand? (α = 12 × 10⁻⁶ /°C)

ΔT = 45 - 15 = 30°C

ΔL = α × L₀ × ΔT

ΔL = 12 × 10⁻⁶ × 10 × 30

ΔL = 0.0036 m = 3.6 mm

Example 2

A 2 m aluminium rod is cooled from 80°C to 20°C. Find the change in length. (α = 23 × 10⁻⁶ /°C)

ΔT = 20 - 80 = -60°C

ΔL = 23 × 10⁻⁶ × 2 × (-60)

ΔL = -0.00276 m = -2.76 mm (the rod contracts)

When to Use It

Use the thermal expansion formula when you need to:

  • Design expansion joints in bridges, railways, and pipelines
  • Account for thermal stress in constrained components
  • Calculate clearance requirements for parts that operate at varying temperatures
  • Predict dimensional changes in precision-machined components

For area expansion, multiply by 2α.

For volume expansion, multiply by 3α.


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