The transient response of an erodable ribbon element heat flux gauge has been assessed using a two-dimensional finite element (FE) analysis. Such transient heat flux gauges have previously been used for measurements in internal combustion (IC) engines. To identify the heat flux from the measurements of surface temperature, it is commonly assumed that the heat transfer within these devices is one-dimensional. A corollary of the one-dimensional treatment is that only one value of the thermal product, , is needed for identification of the transient heat flux, even though erodable heat flux gauges are constructed from at least two different materials. The current results demonstrate that two-dimensional transient heat conduction effects have a significant influence on the surface temperature measurements made with these devices. For the ribbon element gauge and timescales of interest in IC engine studies, using a one-dimensional analysis (and hence a single value of ) will lead to substantial inaccuracy in the derived heat flux measurements.
Transient response of an erodable heat flux gauge using finite element analysis
2002-08-01
6 pages
Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
Elektronische Ressource
Englisch
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