Steady ablation on the surface of a two-layer composite
DOI10.1016/J.IJHEATMASSTRANSFER.2005.06.040zbMATH Open1188.76270OpenAlexW2035491582MaRDI QIDQ976938FDOQ976938
Authors: Wen-Shan Lin
Publication date: 16 June 2010
Published in: International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2005.06.040
Recommendations
- Analytical modeling of the steady state ablation of a 3D C/C composite
- Two-dimensional deforming finite element methods for surface ablation
- Quasi-steady solutions for the ablation of charring materials
- Thermal stresses and heat-mass transfer in ablating composite materials
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 665668
- Numerical modeling of ablations phenomena as two-phase Stefan problems
- Nonintrusive manufactured solutions for non-decomposing ablation in two dimensions
- Ablation of carbon-based materials: investigation of roughness set-up from heterogeneous reactions
Composite and mixture properties (74E30) Thermal effects in solid mechanics (74F05) Stefan problems, phase changes, etc. (80A22) Multiphase and multicomponent flows (76T99)
Cited In (10)
- Heat transfer -- a review of 2005 literature
- A numerical scheme based on discrete mollification method using Bernstein basis polynomials for solving the inverse one-dimensional Stefan problem
- An accurate finite-difference method for ablation-type Stefan problems
- Discrete mollification in Bernstein basis and space marching scheme for numerical solution of an inverse two-phase one-dimensional Stefan problem
- Nonintrusive manufactured solutions for non-decomposing ablation in two dimensions
- Quasi-steady solutions for the ablation of charring materials
- On efficient reconstruction of boundary data with optimal placement of the source points in the MFS: application to inverse Stefan problems
- Applying the combined integral method to one-dimensional ablation
- Analytical modeling of the steady state ablation of a 3D C/C composite
- Pyrolysis of a finite thickness composite material
This page was built for publication: Steady ablation on the surface of a two-layer composite
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q976938)