Calculate Final Temp of Thin Steel Piece: Heat Transfer Problem

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To calculate the final temperature of a thin steel piece subjected to a heat flux of 3000 W/m², key parameters include an initial temperature of 20°C, thermal conductivity of 51.9 W/m*K, specific heat of 0.472 kJ/kg*K, and a thickness of 1 mm. The problem is framed as a transient conduction scenario, where the temperature will stabilize approximately one second after the heat flux is applied. The characteristic diffusion time for 1 mm of steel is around 0.1 seconds, allowing for a nearly uniform temperature distribution at that point. The temperature increase can be estimated using the formula ΔT = E/(cρh), resulting in a calculated increase of about 0.1°C. This approach effectively addresses the heat transfer problem for the specified conditions.
JJ420
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First off I would like to say that this is not a homework question. I am trying to calculate the temperature of a very thin piece of steel.

Assumptions

The underside of the metal is perfectly insulated
To = 20C (initial temperature of material)
Q"=3000W/m^2 (heat flux)
K = 51.9W/m*K (thermal conductivity)
C = .472 KJ/Kg*K ( specific heat)
x = 1mm ( thickness of metal)
t = 0.1s

What I need to know is how to calculate the final temperature at the surface.
 
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Am I right in thinking you are doing some laser heating here? if so you should look at
the paper written by Bechtel "heating of solid targets with laser pulses" . Also check out the citations there are a lot of papers out there that solve this kind of problem
 
This is a transient conduction problem that can be made much easier by assuming you only need to know the temperature about a second after the heat flux is turned off, not before. The reason is that the characteristic diffusion time through 1 mm of steel is about a tenth of a second:

t\approx\frac{h^2}{D}=\frac{h^2 c \rho}{k}\approx 0.1\,\mathrm{sec}

where D is the thermal diffusivity and h is the thickness, and I've used your numbers. After about a second, the temperature will have become nearly uniform in the plate, and the temperature increase can be calculated by considering the amount of input energy: 300 J/m2.

\Delta T=\frac{E}{c\rho h}

I get about a tenth of a degree Celsius for the temperature increase. Does this help?
 
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