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Radiative Heat transfer and Applications for Glass Production Processes

Radiative Heat transfer and Applications for Glass Production Processes. Axel Klar and Norbert Siedow Department of Mathematics, TU Kaiserslautern Fraunhofer ITWM Abteilung Transport processes. Montecatini, 15. – 19. October 2008.

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Radiative Heat transfer and Applications for Glass Production Processes

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  1. Radiative Heat transfer and Applications for Glass Production Processes Axel Klar and Norbert Siedow Department of Mathematics, TU Kaiserslautern Fraunhofer ITWM Abteilung Transport processes Montecatini, 15. – 19. October 2008

  2. Radiative Heat transfer and Applications for Glass Production Processes Planning of the Lectures • Models for fast radiative heat transfer simulation • Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses • Parameter Identification Problems

  3. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses N. Siedow Fraunhofer-Institute for Industrial Mathematics, Kaiserslautern, Germany Montecatini, 15. – 19. October 2008

  4. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot GlassesOutline • Introduction • Some Basics of Inverse Problems • Spectral Remote Sensing • Reconstruction of the Initial Temperature • Impedance Tomography • Conclusions

  5. To determine the temperature: Models for fast radiative heat transfer simulations 1. Introduction Temperature is the most important parameter in all stages of glass production • Homogeneity of glass melt • Drop temperature • Thermal stress • Measurement • Simulation

  6. Heat transfer on a microscale nm Conductivity in W/(Km) With Radiation mm - cm Without Radiation Temperature in °C Heat radiation on a macroscale Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 1. Introduction Radiation is for high temperatures the dominant process

  7. Heat transfer on a microscale nm mm - cm Heat radiation on a macroscale Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 1. Introduction + boundary conditions

  8. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 1. Introduction Direct Measurement • Thermocouples Indirect Measurement • Pyrometer(surface temperature) • Spectral Remote Sensing

  9. 1 1000 [°C] 0.8 Emissivity 0.6 950 0.4 0.2 0 900 0 1 2 3 4 0 1 2 3 4 Depth [mm] l [µm] Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 1. Introduction Glass is semitransparent Spectral Remote Sensing T(z) Spectrometer Inverse Problem

  10. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 2. Some Basics of Inverse Problems Inverse Problems are concerned with finding causes for an observed or a desired effect. • Identification or Reconstruction, if one looks for the cause for an observed effect. • Control or Design, if one looks for a cause for an desired effect.

  11. Input Signal Output Signal - Measurement Black Box Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 2. Some Basics of Inverse Problems Example 1: Assume: If: • Continuous differentiable Solution:

  12. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 2. Some Basics of Inverse Problems Example 1: Given is: We find: • analytically • exact

  13. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 2. Some Basics of Inverse Problems Example 1: A small error in the measurement causes a big error in the reconstruction!

  14. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 2. Some Basics of Inverse Problems Example 1: Numerical Differentiation • In praxis the measured data are finite and not smooth

  15. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 2. Some Basics of Inverse Problems Example 1: Numerical Differentiation • A finer discretization leads to a bigger error

  16. Heat transfer equation • Diffusion equation • „Black-Scholes“ equation Temperature Concentration Option price Thermal conductivity Diffusivity Stock price Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 2. Some Basics of Inverse Problems Example 2: Parameter Identification Practical meaning:

  17. Electrical conductivity Youngs Modulus • Electrical potential equation • Elasticity equation Knowing the potential find the conductivity Electrical potential displacement Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 2. Some Basics of Inverse Problems Example 2: Parameter Identification Practical meaning:

  18. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 2. Some Basics of Inverse Problems Example 2: Parameter Identification Exact Measurement

  19. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 2. Some Basics of Inverse Problems Example 2: Parameter Identification Noisy Measurement

  20. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 2. Some Basics of Inverse Problems Example 2: Parameter Identification Noisy Measurement

  21. Reconstruction: Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 2. Some Basics of Inverse Problems Example 4:

  22. Hadamard (1865-1963) Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 2. Some Basics of Inverse Problems A common property of a vast majority of Inverse Problems is theirill-posedness A mathematical problem is well-posed, if • For all data, there exists a solution of the problem. • For all data, the solution is unique. • The solution depends continuously on the data. A problem is ill-posed if one of these three conditions is violated.

  23. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 2. Some Basics of Inverse Problems What is the reason for the ill-posedness? Example 1: A small error in measurement causes a big error in reconstruction

  24. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 2. Some Basics of Inverse Problems What is the reason for the ill-posedness? Example 1: Step size must be taken with respect to the measurement error

  25. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 2. Some Basics of Inverse Problems What is the reason for the ill-posedness? Example 2: Numerical differentiation of noisy data

  26. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 2. Some Basics of Inverse Problems What is the reason for the ill-posedness? Example 4: Eigenvalues: Condition number:

  27. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 2. Some Basics of Inverse Problems What is the reason for the ill-posedness? Example 4: Eigenvalues: Let be the eigenvectors The solution can be written as: A small error in

  28. Regularization Methods • Truncated Singular Value Decomposition • We skip the small eigenvalue (singular values) identical to the minimization problem and take the solution with minimum norm Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 2. Some Basics of Inverse Problems What can be done to overcome the ill-posedness? Regularization • Replace the ill-posed problem by a family of neighboring well-posed problems

  29. How to choose ? Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 2. Some Basics of Inverse Problems Regularization Methods • Tichonov (Lavrentiev) Regularization • We look for a problem which is near by the original and well-posed We increase the eigenvalues

  30. Take Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 2. Some Basics of Inverse Problems Regularization Methods • Tichonov (Lavrentiev) Regularization • L-curve method

  31. given Use a fixed point iteration to solve Iteration number plays as regularization parameter Stopping rule = discrepancy principle Solution after 4 iterations: Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 2. Some Basics of Inverse Problems Regularization Methods • Landweber Iteration We consider the normal equation

  32. Regularization of the normal equation Tichonov (1906-1993) • Dealing with an ill-posed problem means to find the right balance between stability and accuracy Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 2. Some Basics of Inverse Problems Regularization Methods • Classical Tichonov Regularization Equivalent to the minimization problem

  33. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 2. Some Basics of Inverse Problems Regularization Methods • Classical Tichonov Regularization Regularization of the normal equation Equivalent to the minimization problem • Discrepancy principle • L-curve

  34. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 2. Some Basics of Inverse Problems Regularization Methods • Classical Tichonov Regularization Regularization of the normal equation Equivalent to the minimization problem To get a better solution we need to include more information! Assume:

  35. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 3. Spectral Remote Sensing One-dimensional radiative transfer equation formal solution: Non-linear, ill-posed integral equation of 1. kind

  36. Linearization: Regularization: Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 3. Indirect temperature measurement Formal solution:

  37. How to choose ? (Rosseland-Approximation) Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 3. Indirect temperature measurement Iteratively regularized Gauss – Newton method: ? Temperature satisfies the radiative heat transfer equation is FDA of Radiative Flux

  38. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 3. Indirect temperature measurement Iteratively regularized Gauss – Newton method: ? How to choose ? ? Stopping rule for k? Discrepancy principle

  39. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 3. Indirect temperature measurement Furnace Experiment Furnace Glass slab Thermocouples

  40. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 3. Indirect temperature measurement Drop Temperature

  41. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 3. Indirect temperature measurement The Improved Eddington-Barbier-Approximation If we assume that

  42. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 3. Indirect temperature measurement The Improved Eddington-Barbier-Approximation If we assume that

  43. Calculate using the IEB-method • For • Using some additional information continue to • For Use to calculate Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 3. Indirect temperature measurement A fast iterative solution of the integral equation

  44. Calculate a new temperature profile in the IEB points using • Using the additional information continue to and go back iii. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 3. Indirect temperature measurement A fast iterative solution of the integral equation • If then STOP else continue with v.

  45. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 3. Indirect temperature measurement Iteration 1

  46. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 3. Indirect temperature measurement Iteration 2

  47. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 3. Indirect temperature measurement Iteration 3

  48. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 3. Indirect temperature measurement Iteration 4

  49. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 3. Indirect temperature measurement Iteration 5

  50. Indirect Temperature Measurement of Hot Glasses 3. Indirect temperature measurement Iteration 10

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