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Lecture # 4-FEA

The document describes using the direct formulation method to determine the temperature distribution through an exterior wall of a house. It involves discretizing the wall into finite elements, developing the conductivity matrix for each element, assembling the overall conductivity matrix, applying boundary conditions, and solving the system of equations to find the unknown nodal temperatures. The method is demonstrated through an example problem involving a wall made of several common building materials.

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Bilal Khalid
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
30 views

Lecture # 4-FEA

The document describes using the direct formulation method to determine the temperature distribution through an exterior wall of a house. It involves discretizing the wall into finite elements, developing the conductivity matrix for each element, assembling the overall conductivity matrix, applying boundary conditions, and solving the system of equations to find the unknown nodal temperatures. The method is demonstrated through an example problem involving a wall made of several common building materials.

Uploaded by

Bilal Khalid
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Course Title

Introduction to Finite Element Analysis


BME-474 (Credit Hrs. = 2+ 1)

Course Instructor
Engr. Zeeshan Anjum
Lecturer, MED
MUST Mirpur Azad Kashmir

Class
Mechanical Engineering, 2k19

Lecture # 04 Direct formulation: Example 1.2


Overview
2

1. Direct Formulation: Example 1.2


A typical exterior frame wall (made up of 2 x 4 studs) of a
house contains the materials shown in the table. Assume an
inside room temperature of 70°F and an outside air
temperature of 20°F, with an exposed area of 150 ft2.

Determine the temperature distribution through the wall.

Prepared By: Engr. Zeeshan Anjum, Lecturer MED, MUST Mirpur Azad Kashmir
3 Prepared By: Engr. Zeeshan Anjum, Lecturer MED, MUST Mirpur Azad Kashmir
Preprocessing Phase
1. Discretize the solution domain into finite elements.

Heat Transfer Modes:


• Conduction in element 2, 3, 4 & 5
• Convection in element 1 and 6

4 Prepared By: Engr. Zeeshan Anjum, Lecturer MED, MUST Mirpur Azad Kashmir
2. Assume a solution that approximates the behavior of an
element.
T
Fourier’s Law for conduction: q X  kA
X

“qx” is the X-component of the heat


transfer rate,
“k” is the thermal conductivity of the
medium,
“A” is the area, and
T
X is the temperature gradient.

5 Prepared By: Engr. Zeeshan Anjum, Lecturer MED, MUST Mirpur Azad Kashmir
kA(Ti 1  Ti ) (For elements 2, 3, 4
q and 5)

The U-factor represents thermal transmission through a unit
k
area and has the units of Btu/hr  ft  F (U  ).
2

q  UA(Ti 1  Ti )

3. Develop equations for an element.


kA
qi  (Ti  Ti 1 )

kA
qi 1  (Ti 1  Ti )

 qi  kA  1  1  Ti 
     
qi 1    1 1  Ti 1 
6 Prepared By: Engr. Zeeshan Anjum, Lecturer MED, MUST Mirpur Azad Kashmir
The thermal conductance matrix for an element is

kA  1  1
K 
(e)

  1 1 

 1  1
K 
(e)
 UA 
  1 1 

For convection heat transfer in elements 1 and 6,


according to Newton’s Law of cooling:
q  hA(Ti 1  Ti )
Where, h = convective heat transfer coeffiecient
We will replace “h” by “U”

7 Prepared By: Engr. Zeeshan Anjum, Lecturer MED, MUST Mirpur Azad Kashmir
4. Assemble the elements to present the entire problems.
 U1  U1 
K (1)
 A
Here U=h i.e. case convective
 U1 U1  heat transfer in element # 1

 U1  U1 0 0 0 0 0 T1
 U 0 T2
 1 U1 0 0 0 0
 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 T3
 
K  (1G )
 A 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 T4
 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 T5
 
 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 T6
 0 0 T7
 0 0 0 0 0

8 Prepared By: Engr. Zeeshan Anjum, Lecturer MED, MUST Mirpur Azad Kashmir
For Element # 2:
U2  Here U=(k/l) i.e. case
 U2
K ( 2)  A
U 2 
conduction heat transfer in
 U 2 element # 2

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 T1
0 U U2 0 0 0 0 T2
 2

0  U 2 U2 0 0 0 0 T3
 
K ( 2G )  A 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 T4
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 T5
 
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 T6
0 0 T7
 0 0 0 0 0

9 Prepared By: Engr. Zeeshan Anjum, Lecturer MED, MUST Mirpur Azad Kashmir
Similarly by adding global conductance matrix of each
element we get:

K (G )  K (1G )  K ( 2G )  K (3G )  K ( 4G )  K (5G )  K (6G )

 U1  U1 0 0 0 0 0 
 U U  U U2 0 0 0 0 
 1 1 2

 0 U2 U2 U3 U3 0 0 0 


 
K (G )  A 0 0 U3 U3  U 4 U4 0 0 
 0 0 0 U4 U 4  U5 U5 0 
 
 0 0 0 0 U5 U5 U6 U6 
 0 U6 U 6 
 0 0 0 0

10 Prepared By: Engr. Zeeshan Anjum, Lecturer MED, MUST Mirpur Azad Kashmir
5. Apply boundary conditions and thermal loads.

T1  20 F 
T7  70  F

1 0 0 0 0 0 0  T1  20 F
 A 
  U 1 U1  U 2  U2 0 0 0 0  T2   0 
 
 0  U2 U2  U3  U3 0 0 0  T3   0 
    
A 0 0  U3 U3  U4  U4 0 0  T4    0 
 0 0 0  U4 U 4  U5  U5 0  T5   0 
    
 0 0 0 0  U5 U5  U6  U 6  T6   0 
 0 1  T  70 F 
A  7   
0 0 0 0 0

11 Prepared By: Engr. Zeeshan Anjum, Lecturer MED, MUST Mirpur Azad Kashmir
After applying the boundary conditions, we get

U1  U 2 U2 0 0 0  T2  U1 AT1 


 U U2  U3 U3 0 0  T3   0 
 2
   
A 0 U3 U3  U4 U4 0  T4    0 
 
 0 0 U4 U4  U5  U 5  T5   0 
   
 0 0 0 U5 U 5  U 6  T6  U 6 AT7 

[conductance matrix]{temperature matrix}={heat flow matrix}

KT q

12 Prepared By: Engr. Zeeshan Anjum, Lecturer MED, MUST Mirpur Azad Kashmir
Solution Phase
Solve a system of algebraic equations simultaneously using the
given data to find unknown nodal temperatures at nodes 2, 3, 4,
5 and 6.

13 Prepared By: Engr. Zeeshan Anjum, Lecturer MED, MUST Mirpur Azad Kashmir
Simplifying the reduced form, we get

Solving this
we get nodal
temperatures:

14
Prepared By: Engr. Zeeshan Anjum, Lecturer MED, MUST Mirpur Azad Kashmir
Post Processing Phase
Heat transfer through each element can be found by:

• We have assumed steady state conditions, the heat loss


through the wall should be equal to the heat transfer
through each element.

Using the given data and nodal temperatures we get:

15 Prepared By: Engr. Zeeshan Anjum, Lecturer MED, MUST Mirpur Azad Kashmir
Thank you!
For any query contact me at:

[email protected]

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