Hyperbolic heat conduction and the second law (Q1205382): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 15:14, 17 May 2024

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Hyperbolic heat conduction and the second law
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    Hyperbolic heat conduction and the second law (English)
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    1 April 1993
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    It is well known that Cattaneo's modification of the constitutive equation for heat flux [\textit{D. D. Joseph} and \textit{L. Preziosi}, Rev. Mod. Phys. 61, No. 1, 41-74 (1989)] yields a telegraph equation for determining temperature that models hyperbolic heat conduction with a finite thermal wave speed. By analyzing the solution of an example of thermal equilibration of an initially inhomogeneous state it is shown that Cattaneo's model violates a notion of the second law of thermodynamics because it predicts that heat may flow from cold to hot regions during finite time periods. In this paper we discuss modified restrictions associated with the second law and we propose an alternative formulation of the equations for heat conduction which retains the usual Fourier equation for heat flux but modifies the constitutive equations for internal energy, Helmholtz free energy, and entropy to include dependence on temperature rate. This alternative formulation satisfies the restrictions associated with the second law.
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    telegraph equation
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    Cattaneo's model
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    Fourier equation
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    constitutive equations
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    internal energy
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    Helmholtz free energy
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    entropy
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