scholarly journals Modeling of the physical phenomenon of heat generation by using partial differential equations

2021 ◽  
Vol 2073 (1) ◽  
pp. 012014
Author(s):  
J J Cadena Morales ◽  
C A López Castro ◽  
H F Rojas Molano

Abstract The equations of mathematical physics are a natural environment for modeling physical phenomena, an example of the above is evidenced by the heat equation in relation to its use in a variety of applications; directly related to the equations of mathematical physics are the solution methods that are used to construct the predictive models. This paper describes step by step the analytical method of separation of variables to perform a complete description of the heat conduction phenomenon in the presence of a heat generation source. The investigation by using mathematical arguments allowed to calculate the temperature function as the addition of a Fourier series and a function which represents the steady state; by performing a computational simulation, it was possible to demonstrate the accuracy of the results achieved.

2021 ◽  
Vol 2102 (1) ◽  
pp. 012016
Author(s):  
C Nolasco Serna ◽  
N Afanador Garcia ◽  
G Guerrero Gómez

Abstract The study of physical phenomena that include conservative principles is part of the research field of the equations of mathematical physics. To deepen in methods to solve the equations of mathematical physics is a contribution in understanding the modeling of applications in different areas. This research studies the physical phenomenon of heat transport with convection from the viewpoint of modeling with differential equations. The advantage of working with equations is to apply the techniques of mathematical analysis and numerical methods to obtain the temperature function. In the research, the solution of the heat transport model is computed according to the analytical method of separable variables in order to represent the temperature function as a trigonometric series. With the help of a simple numerical method, it is possible to derive a scheme of calculation of the temperature function. By performing a case study, the methods are compared, and their fit is verified by simulation.


2019 ◽  
Vol 486 (3) ◽  
pp. 287-291
Author(s):  
A. D. Polyanin ◽  
A. I. Zhurov

The study describes a new modification of the method of functional separation of variables for nonlinear equations of mathematical physics. Solutions are sought in an implicit form that involves several free functions; the specific expressions of these functions are determined in the subsequent analysis of the arising functional differential equations. The effectiveness of the method is illustrated by examples of nonlinear reaction-diffusion equations and Klein-Gordon type equations with variable coefficients that depend on one or more arbitrary functions. A number of new exact functional separable solutions and generalized traveling-wave solutions are obtained.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2102 (1) ◽  
pp. 012015
Author(s):  
C Nolasco Serna ◽  
N Afanador Garcia ◽  
G Guerrero Gómez

Abstract The development of mathematical setting for modeling heat conduction phenomena in the presence of radioactive effects is well known. The importance in the study of heat conduction in relation to radioactive effects is relevant in several engineering applications such as combustion, materials science, fluid mechanics and other areas. This research is based on the mathematical model of the heat equation to study the physical phenomenon of heat transfer along a metal bar with slightly insulated sides with the effect of free radiation. To calculate the temperature function that allows modeling the heat transfer process along the bar, the Fourier series solution is constructed step by step, in addition an alternative method of calculating the temperature by using the explicit numerical method is given. The calculation of the temperature along the bar is compared by analytical and numerical method by computing the percentage error and different temperature profiles are plotted to verify the fit of the two approaches. The methods developed throughout the research can be extended to other types of physical phenomena that are useful in related research and in education in engineering subjects such as fluid mechanics and heat transfer.


1976 ◽  
Vol 60 ◽  
pp. 35-80 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. P. Boyer ◽  
E. G. Kalnins ◽  
W. Miller

This paper is one of a series relating the symmetry groups of the principal linear partial differential equations of mathematical physics and the coordinate systems in which variables separate for these equations. In particular, we mention [1] and paper [2] which is a survey of and introduction to the series. Here we apply group-theoretic methods to study the separable coordinate systems for the Helmholtz equation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2102 (1) ◽  
pp. 012018
Author(s):  
J J Cadena-Morales ◽  
C A López-Castro ◽  
J M Alba-Maldonado

Abstract The mathematical modeling of the physical phenomenon of conduction in the presence of heat sources has various uses in engineering ranging from heat diffusion, pollution generation in large cities and chemical reactions. From the mathematical theory, the study of physical phenomena with the presence of heat is approached from techniques of polynomial approximation, analysis of variations and numerical methods. In this research a mathematical model is proposed to study the heat conduction in a metal bar with a heat source. In the first part of the work, by the application of the method of the parameter variation, the exact solution of the mathematical model is calculated. Subsequently, by means of a case study of the physical phenomenon of heat conduction with internal energy source, with the use of computational simulation, the convergence of the Fourier series linked to the physical phenomenon is shown. The mathematical method proposed in the paper can be applied to other physical phenomena such as wave propagation, electric potential, and chemical reactions.


Author(s):  
M. Palaniappan ◽  
V. Ng ◽  
R. Heiderhoff ◽  
J.C.H. Phang ◽  
G.B.M. Fiege ◽  
...  

Abstract Light emission and heat generation of Si devices have become important in understanding physical phenomena in device degradation and breakdown mechanisms. This paper correlates the photon emission with the temperature distribution of a short channel nMOSFET. Investigations have been carried out to localize and characterize the hot spots using a spectroscopic photon emission microscope and a scanning thermal microscope. Frontside investigations have been carried out and are compared and discussed with backside investigations. A method has been developed to register the backside thermal image with the backside illuminated image.


1885 ◽  
Vol 176 ◽  
pp. 307-342 ◽  

1. The tendency to apply dynamical principles and methods to explain physical phenomena has steadily increased ever since the discovery of the principle of the Conservation of Energy. This discovery called attention to the ready conversion of the energy of visible motion into such apparently dissimilar things as heat and electric currents, and led almost irresistibly to the conclusion that these too are forms of kinetic energy, though the moving bodies must be infinitesimally small in comparison with the bodies which form the moving pieces of any of the structures or machines with which we are acquainted. As soon as this conception of heat and electricity was reached mathematicians began to apply to them the dynamical method of the Con­servation of Energy, and many physical phenomena were shown to be related to each other, and others predicted by the use of this principle; thus, to take an example, the induction of electric currents by a moving magnet was shown by von Helmholtz to be a necessary consequence of the fact that an electric current produces a magnetic field. Of late years things have been carried still further; thus Sir William Thomson in many of his later papers, and especially in his address to the British Association at Montreal on “Steps towards a Kinetic Theory of Matter,” has devoted a good deal of attention to the description of machines capable of producing effects analogous to some physical phenomenon, such, for example, as the rotation of the plane of polarisation of light by quartz and other crystals. For these reasons the view (which we owe to the principle of the Conservation of Energy) that every physical phenomenon admits of a dynamical explanation is one that will hardly be questioned at the present time. We may look on the matter (including, if necessary, the ether) which plays a part in any physical phenomenon as forming a material system and study the dynamics of this system by means of any of the methods which we apply to the ordinary systems in the Dynamics of Rigid Bodies. As we do not know much about the structure of the systems we can only hope to obtain useful results by using methods which do not require an exact knowledge of the mechanism of the system. The method of the Conservation of Energy is such a method, but there are others which hardly require a greater knowledge of the structure of the system and yet are capable of giving us more definite information than that principle when used in the ordinary way. Lagrange's equations and Hamilton's method of Varying Action are methods of this kind, and it is the object of this paper to apply these methods to study the transformations of some of the forms of energy, and to show how useful they are for coordinating results of very different kinds as well as for suggesting new phenomena. A good many of the results which we shall get have been or can be got by the use of the ordinary principle of Thermodynamics, and it is obvious that this principle must have close relations with any method based on considerations about energy. Lagrange’s equations were used with great success by Maxwell in his ‘Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism,’ vol. ii., chaps. 6, 7, 8, to find the equations of the electromagnetic field.


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