Solving Direct and Inverse Heat Conduction Problems - Jan Taler

Solving Direct and Inverse Heat Conduction Problems

By: Jan Taler, Piotr Duda

eText | 16 April 2010

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This book is devoted to the concept of simple and inverse heat conduction problems. The process of solving direct problems is based on the tempera­ ture determination when initial and boundary conditions are known, while the solving of inverse problems is based on the search for boundary condi­ tions when temperature properties are known, provided that temperature is the function of time, at the selected inner points of a body. In the first part of the book (Chaps. 1-5), we have discussed theoretical basis for thermal conduction in solids, motionless liquids and liquids that move in time. In the second part of the book, (Chapters 6-26), we have discussed at great length different engineering problems, which we have presented together with the proposed solutions in the form of theoretical and mathematical examples. It was our intention to acquaint the reader in a step-by-step fashion with all the mathematical derivations and solutions to some of the more significant transient and steady-state heat conduction problems with respect to both, the movable and immovable heat sources and the phenomena of melting and freezing. Lots of attention was paid to non-linear problems. The methods for solving heat conduction problems, i. e. the exact and approximate analytical methods and numerical methods, such as the finite difference method, the finite volume method, the finite element method and the boundary element method are discussed in great detail. Aside from algorithms, applicable computational programs, written in a FORTRAN language, were given.
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