A semi-analytical model for evaluation of effective thermal conductivity of composites with periodic microstructure

Author(s):  
Eduardo Nobre Lages ◽  
Severino Pereira Cavalcanti Marques
2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 101
Author(s):  
A. Dobri ◽  
T.D. Papathanasiou

This paper presents a semi-analytical model for transient heat conduction in a composite material reinforced with small spherical inclusions. Essential to the derivation of the model is the assumption that the size of the inclusions is much smaller than the length scale characterizing the macroscopic problem. An interfacial thermal resistance is also present between the two phases. During heating, the inclusions are treated as heat sinks within the matrix, with the coupling provided by the boundary conditions at the surface of the embedded particles. Application of Duhamel’s Theorem at the particle scale provides the local relationship between the temperature profile in a particle and the matrix that surrounds it. A simple spatial discretization at the macro-scale leads to an easily solvable system of coupled Ordinary Differential Equations for the matrix temperature, particle surface temperature and a series of ψ-terms related to the heat exchange between phases. The interfacial thermal resistance between the two phases can lead to the particle temperature lagging behind that of the surrounding matrix. The resulting transient response of the matrix temperature cannot be reproduced by a material with a single effective thermal conductivity. In the case where transient methods are used to determine effective thermal conductivity, this transient response may introduce errors into the measurement.


Author(s):  
P. Karayacoubian ◽  
M. Bahrami ◽  
J. R. Culham

A general predictive model for the effective thermal conductivity of mixtures is developed. In the limit of very small particle volume fractions, a limiting case is approached where the effective medium theory of Maxwell holds. At higher solid fractions, an analytical model for the conductivity of a packed bed of spheres is developed. These two limiting asymptotic solutions are then combined using a blending procedure. The result is a semi-analytical model that is valid over the full range of solid fractions. The model shows that in addition to the conductivities of the particle/matrix and the solid fraction, the degree of wetting of the particles by the matrix is an important parameter in estimating the effective thermal conductivity of the mixture. In addition, the effect of entrapped air is captured through the definition of an effective volume fraction in Maxwell’s model. The model shows good agreement with experimental data.


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