Inverse modeling of heat transfer with application to solidification and quenching

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Date

2002

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Abstract

The inverse modeling of heat transfer involves the estimation of boundary conditions from the knowledge of thermal history inside a heat conducting body. Inverse analysis is extremely useful in modeling of contact heat transfer at interfaces of engineering surface during materials processing. In the present work, the one-dimensional transient heat conduction equation was inversely modeled in both cartesian as well as cylindrical coordinates. The model is capable of estimating heat flux transients, chill surface temperature, and total heat flow from the source to the sink for an input of thermal history inside the sink. The methodology was adopted to solve boundary heat transfer problems inversely during solidification and quenching. The response of the inverse solution to measured sensor data was studied by carrying out numerical experiments involving the use of varying grid size and time steps, future temperatures, and regularization techniques.

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Keywords

Contact heat transfer, Data acquisition, Data noise, Future temperature, Heat conduction, Heat transfer, Inferfacial heat flux, Interfacial heat transfer coefficient, Inverse modeling, Metal/mold interface, Quenchants, Quenching, Regularization, Sensitivity coefficient, Solidification

Citation

Materials and Manufacturing Processes, 2002, Vol.17, 4, p. 469-481

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