scholarly journals Compensation of Three-Dimensional Heat Conduction Inside Wall in Heat Transfer Measurement of Dimpled Surface by Using Transient Technique(Thermal Engineering)

2010 ◽  
Vol 76 (772) ◽  
pp. 2227-2234
Author(s):  
Satomi NISHIDA ◽  
Akira MURATA ◽  
Hiroshi SAITO ◽  
Kaoru IWAMOTO
1989 ◽  
Vol 111 (1) ◽  
pp. 20-27 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. W. Ainsworth ◽  
J. L. Allen ◽  
M. R. D. Davies ◽  
J. E. Doorly ◽  
C. J. P. Forth ◽  
...  

Transient heat transfer measurement techniques have long been used in two-dimensional stationary cascade tests designed to model turbine conditions used in Oxford. More recently, experiments studying some of the unsteady effects have been carried out using a rotating wake generator upstream of the rotor cascade. Currently work has concentrated on providing a fully three-dimensional rotating turbine stage. In an associated paper, the modifications necessary to accommodate this stage in the Oxford Isentropic Light Piston Tunnel are discussed. In this paper the developments necessary to permit the measurement of transient heat transfer under these rotating conditions are fully described.


Author(s):  
Koji Nishi ◽  
Tomoyuki Hatakeyama ◽  
Shinji Nakagawa ◽  
Masaru Ishizuka

The thermal network method has a long history with thermal design of electronic equipment. In particular, a one-dimensional thermal network is useful to know the temperature and heat transfer rate along each heat transfer path. It also saves computation time and/or computation resources to obtain target temperature. However, unlike three-dimensional thermal simulation with fine pitch grids and a three-dimensional thermal network with sufficient numbers of nodes, a traditional one-dimensional thermal network cannot predict the temperature of a microprocessor silicon die hot spot with sufficient accuracy in a three-dimensional domain analysis. Therefore, this paper introduces a one-dimensional thermal network with average temperature nodes. Thermal resistance values need to be obtained to calculate target temperature in a thermal network. For this purpose, thermal resistance calculation methodology with simplified boundary conditions, which calculates thermal resistance values from an analytical solution, is also introduced in this paper. The effectiveness of the methodology is explored with a simple model of the microprocessor system. The calculated result by the methodology is compared to a three-dimensional heat conduction simulation result. It is found that the introduced technique matches the three-dimensional heat conduction simulation result well.


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