Robert Koslover
Certified Consultant
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Posted:
8 years ago
27 sept. 2016, 15:02 UTC−4
If the resulting distribution or flow of heat within the surrounding volume itself is not of interest to you, then you may be able to represent that surrounding volume by a boundary condition on your object. The choice of boundary condition depends on what you need to represent. For example, for an object immersed in a constant-temperature, high thermal conductivity heat reservoir, you might want to specify a fixed temperature (i.e., the temperature of the heat reservoir) on the boundary of your object. On the other hand, for an object surrounded by a thermally insulating environment, you might want to specify a thermal insulation boundary condition. For conditions in-between those extremes, you'll need to come up with something else that is realistic, or you'll risk getting the wrong answer. In that case, you may need to include at least some of that surrounding volume in your computation space, and then surround that larger volume with an appropriate boundary condition.
If the resulting distribution or flow of heat within the surrounding volume itself is not of interest to you, then you may be able to represent that surrounding volume by a boundary condition on your object. The choice of boundary condition depends on what you need to represent. For example, for an object immersed in a constant-temperature, high thermal conductivity heat reservoir, you might want to specify a fixed temperature (i.e., the temperature of the heat reservoir) on the boundary of your object. On the other hand, for an object surrounded by a thermally insulating environment, you might want to specify a thermal insulation boundary condition. For conditions in-between those extremes, you'll need to come up with something else that is realistic, or you'll risk getting the wrong answer. In that case, you may need to include at least some of that surrounding volume in your computation space, and then surround that larger volume with an appropriate boundary condition.