scholarly journals A monolithic approach toward coupled electrodynamic–thermomechanical problems with regard to weak formulations

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Ricoeur ◽  
M. Wingen

AbstractWeak formulations of boundary value problems are the basis of various numerical discretization schemes. They are classically derived applying the method of weighted residuals or a variational principle. For electrodynamical and caloric problems, variational approaches are not straightforwardly obtained from physical principles like in mechanics. Weak formulations of Maxwell’s equations and of energy or charge balances thus are frequently derived from the method of weighted residuals or tailored variational approaches. Related formulations of multiphysical problems, combining mechanical balance equations and the axioms of electrodynamics with those of heat conduction, however, raise the additional issue of lacking consistency of physical units, since fluxes of charge and heat intrinsically involve time rates and temperature is only included in the heat balance. In this paper, an energy-based approach toward combined electrodynamic–thermomechanical problems is presented within a classical framework, merging Hamilton’s and Jourdain’s variational principles, originally established in analytical mechanics, to obtain an appropriate basis for a multiphysical formulation. Complementing the Lagrange function by additional potentials of heat flux and electric current and appropriately defining generalized virtual powers of external fields including dissipative processes, a consistent formulation is obtained for the four-field problem and compared to a weighted residuals approach.

Author(s):  
Devesh Upadhyay ◽  
Michiel Van Nieuwstadt

A zero order lumped parameter control oriented model of a Selective Catalytic Reduction (SCR) catalyst is presented. The lumped parameter model is developed using two approaches. in the first approach it was assumed that the catalyst behaves as an Isothermal Continuously Stirred Tank Reactor (ICSTR). The second approach involved deriving the lumped parameter model from a 1D model using the method of weighted residuals. Both approaches led to a three state model, with the gas phase concentrations of NOx and NH3 and the surface coverage fraction as the states. The model depends on chemical properties specific to the SCR catalyst; consequently model validation requires knowledge of these parameters, either via laboratory-based experiments or as supplied by the catalyst supplier. We present an alternate approach that allows estimation of the essential parameters through a minimization of the l2 errors between measured and simulated results.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document