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March 7, 2019 at 9:07 am
RobinC
SubscriberHi everyone,Â
For my study I want to study the temperature evolution inside a wire of copper du to an electric current. So the case is quite simple, I have :
   Created a cylinder
   Imported that cylinder in the "thermoelectric" module
   Assigned copper as materialÂ
   Choosen a 0 V voltage for a face and an electric current of 350 A at the opposite.Â
   Choosen radiation for the "temperature" condition. The environment temperature is set at 10°C.Â
350 A is a high value, one would expect an important rise of the temperature. Que nenni, the max temperature is lower than 11°C!Â
I've tried different things to fix this issue, as :
Changing the radiation model for a temperature model (doesn't work).
Changing current for voltage, with only 1 V the max temperature reached 2080°C. Obviously a wrong result too.Â
So I was wondering if one of you already had this kind of issue and if a solution has been found I'm curious too know what I'm doing wrong.Â
Thanks in advance!
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March 7, 2019 at 2:32 pm
jj77
SubscriberSimple test here. 0.5 m long steel wire with 1E-3 V on one and 0 V on the opposite face end. With tiny convection BC on all 3 faces of 1E-4 and bulk temp of 22 for the conv.
Â
Voltage is 1E-3 on one end and 0 on other.
Dir. electric file int. Ez = -dV/dz = .001V/0.5 m = -.002 V/m, that is what ansys gives.
Dir current density: Jz=sigmaz*Ez = 1/(1.7E-7)*-.002= -1.1765E4 A/m2, that is what ansys gives
Joule heating = Jz^2*resistivity = (-1.1765E4)^2*1.7E-7 = 23.53 W/m2, that is what ansys gives.
Temp. rise is from 22 ambient to 314, that is correct answer (just add the internal heat on a pure steady state heat transfer run, and one gets same)
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March 8, 2019 at 10:22 am
RobinC
SubscriberThanks a lot for your quick and accurate answer!Â
The main issue is to understand why you've picked 1 mV. I mean I'm supposed to have a electric current of 350 A so this value seems realy low in comparison.Â
Moreover I've the same values (in order of magnitude) for Ez, Jz and the joule heating but the temperature remains too high, 1e5 °C. Maybe I plot the wrong thing, but I don"t think so.Â
If you want to check I can share a link with the project, I don't know if I can share it directly here.Â
Thank you one more timeÂ
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March 8, 2019 at 1:25 pm
jj77
SubscriberSimple reason, linear regime, where hopefully all the material properties are not varying to much and perhaps are equal to the constant value provided in eng. data. But again I do not know that since the temperature increase was quite large (if convection is changed to normal values, then the temp rise is lower of course)
Â
If temperatures gets higher, all material properties (resistivity, ….) will change, things are then nonlinear and thus more complex. I am not an expert in that.
But in any case if you want to do that, I would suggest that you find some experiments/data to compare with, or if you find some other published data on this.
A good ansys verification benchmark is vm119
Â
Good luck with everything. That's it from me
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