Abstract

ABSTRACTThis paper presents an inverse study of heat transfer of a conductive, convective and radiative annular fin made of a functionally graded material. Three major parameters such as conductive–convective parameter, conductive–radiative parameter and the parameter describing the variation of thermal conductivity are inversely estimated from a specified temperature field. The forward solution of temperature field is obtained from the closed form solution of nonlinear heat transfer equation using Homotopy perturbation method (HPM). A dragonfly algorithm that simulates the swarming behaviour of dragonflies, as analogous, is employed in finding out the inverse parameters. The temperature values of the forward solution are used as input data for the inverse analysis. The inverse parameters are then estimated iteratively by minimizing the objective function until the guessed temperature field approximately satisfies the preassigned temperature field of the forward solution. The inverse simulation following HPM-based forward solution converges faster than ordinary differential equation-based forward solution. The reconstructed temperature fields obtained from the various combination of inverse parameters give good agreement (∼1% error) with the desired temperature field. Thus, the presented inverse model provides an opportunity to the fin designer for selecting the several feasible combinations of thermal parameters suggesting the material design that result in a prescribed temperature field.

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