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modeling thin film heaters at the interface of 2 materials

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Hi,

So I am not sure what is the best way to model a thin film heater (say around 1 micron) at the interface of 2 materials (each around a mm thick). I tried using surface heat flux option but that does not work because apparently the solver has to know how much gets divided into the 2 domains.
The problem with adding an extra thin layer of volumetric heat generating material is that the meshing becomes really complicated.

Any suggestion will be highly appreciated.

Best,
Sumeet

2 Replies Last Post 2012年1月11日 GMT-5 15:35
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Posted: 1 decade ago 2012年1月11日 GMT-5 09:42
Hi,

I want to do the same thing but i have some convergence problems, can you give me some advices ?

thank you
Hi, I want to do the same thing but i have some convergence problems, can you give me some advices ? thank you

Ivar KJELBERG COMSOL Multiphysics(r) fan, retired, former "Senior Expert" at CSEM SA (CH)

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Posted: 1 decade ago 2012年1月11日 GMT-5 15:35
Hi

at least in HT (4.2a) you can add a boundary source, take a look at the simple model below, I have also added a suface "thin conductive layer". Material properties are just arbitrary.

If you are in a time dependent solver case be aware of the mesh size to time stepping versus material alpha (heat diffusivity) to respec. Take a look at the doc, or rather most "classical" HT textbooks.

--
Good luck
Ivar
Hi at least in HT (4.2a) you can add a boundary source, take a look at the simple model below, I have also added a suface "thin conductive layer". Material properties are just arbitrary. If you are in a time dependent solver case be aware of the mesh size to time stepping versus material alpha (heat diffusivity) to respec. Take a look at the doc, or rather most "classical" HT textbooks. -- Good luck Ivar

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