Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Buttsworth, David, Buttsworth, Timothy
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2412.01362
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1866916502930718720
author Buttsworth, David
Buttsworth, Timothy
author_facet Buttsworth, David
Buttsworth, Timothy
contents When the variations of surface temperature are measured both spatially and temporally, analytical expressions that correctly account for multi-dimensional transient conduction can be applied. To enhance the accessibility of these accurate multi-dimensional methods, expressions for converting between surface temperature and heat flux are presented as the sum of the one-dimensional component plus the multi-dimensional component. Advantage arises herein because potential numerical challenges are isolated within the one-dimensional component and practitioners are already familiar with well-established one-dimensional methods. The second derivative of the surface heat flux distribution scaled by the thermal diffusivity and the duration of the experiment delivers an approximation of the multi-dimensional conduction term. For the analysis of experiments in which multi-dimensional effects are significant, a simplified numerical approach in which the temperature within each pixel is treated as uniform is demonstrated. The approach involves convolution of temperature differences and pixel-based impulse response functions, followed by a summation of results across the region of interest, but there are no singularities that require special treatment in the multi-dimensional component. Recovery of heat flux distributions to within 1% is demonstrated for two-dimensional heat flux distributions discretized using several tens of elements, and for a three-dimensional distribution discretized using several hundred pixels. Higher accuracy can be achieved by using finer spatial resolution, but the level of discretization used herein is likely sufficient for practical applications since typical experimental uncertainties are much larger than 1%.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2412_01362
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Accurate transient heat flux from simple treatment of surface temperature distribution in the semi-infinite case
Buttsworth, David
Buttsworth, Timothy
Instrumentation and Detectors
When the variations of surface temperature are measured both spatially and temporally, analytical expressions that correctly account for multi-dimensional transient conduction can be applied. To enhance the accessibility of these accurate multi-dimensional methods, expressions for converting between surface temperature and heat flux are presented as the sum of the one-dimensional component plus the multi-dimensional component. Advantage arises herein because potential numerical challenges are isolated within the one-dimensional component and practitioners are already familiar with well-established one-dimensional methods. The second derivative of the surface heat flux distribution scaled by the thermal diffusivity and the duration of the experiment delivers an approximation of the multi-dimensional conduction term. For the analysis of experiments in which multi-dimensional effects are significant, a simplified numerical approach in which the temperature within each pixel is treated as uniform is demonstrated. The approach involves convolution of temperature differences and pixel-based impulse response functions, followed by a summation of results across the region of interest, but there are no singularities that require special treatment in the multi-dimensional component. Recovery of heat flux distributions to within 1% is demonstrated for two-dimensional heat flux distributions discretized using several tens of elements, and for a three-dimensional distribution discretized using several hundred pixels. Higher accuracy can be achieved by using finer spatial resolution, but the level of discretization used herein is likely sufficient for practical applications since typical experimental uncertainties are much larger than 1%.
title Accurate transient heat flux from simple treatment of surface temperature distribution in the semi-infinite case
topic Instrumentation and Detectors
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2412.01362