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Picosecond laser heat of solid-liquid system
Posted 15 juil. 2018, 22:03 UTC−4 Structural & Acoustics, Heat Transfer & Phase Change, Heat Transfer Version 5.3 0 Replies
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Hello Users, I am modeling the heat transfer between a metal nanoparticle in an aqueous medium (water) when subject to a picosecond Gaussian pulse. At present, I am assuming classical heat diffusion under the heat transfer module. Later, I will switch to the 'two-temperature model' for accuracy.
I want to compare the temperature v/s time plots (probe situated at the nanoparticle-water interface) for the cases - with and without 'thin film resistance'. On comparing the temperature plots, I find that the temperature at the nanoparticle surface from the 'perfect contact (zero thermal boundary resistance)' simulation to be higher than the simulation with a finite value of the thermal boundary resistance. This is not the correct behavior, as in the latter, there is resistance to the heat flow and hence the temperature of the surface should be higher than the perfect contact simulation.
I have checked the quality of mesh and using very fine timesteps. Can anyone comment on this? Please note, this is not the case for 'ns' laser pulse heating and over there the results are consistent with the physics.
-DS
Hello Daipayan Sarkar
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