Abstract

In the present study, the hyperbolic heat conduction equation is derived from the Boltzmann transport equation and the analytical solution of the resulting equation appropriate to the laser short-pulse heating of a solid surface is presented. The time exponentially decaying pulse is incorporated as a volumetric heat source in the hyperbolic equation to account for the absorption of the incident laser energy. The Fourier transformation is used to simplify the hyperbolic equation and the analytical solution of the simplified equation is obtained using the Laplace transformation method. Temperature distribution in space and time are computed in steel for two laser pulse parameters. It is found that internal energy gain from the irradiated field, due to the presence of the volumetric heat source in the hyperbolic equation, results in rapid rise of temperature in the surface region during the early heating period. In addition, temperature decay is gradual in the surface region and as the depth below the surface increases beyond the absorption depth, temperature decay becomes sharp.

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