Understanding PDEs and Boundary Conditions for Heat Transfer in Ice Engineering

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A high school student preparing for an ice engineering internship seeks guidance on studying heat transfer and related concepts from a specialized research paper. The discussion highlights the importance of understanding partial differential equations (PDEs), particularly the heat conduction equation, which requires both boundary and initial conditions for unique solutions. To grasp these topics, a solid foundation in differential and integral calculus is essential, along with resources like Thermal Science textbooks and MIT's OpenCourseWare. The conversation emphasizes that boundary conditions are necessary alongside initial conditions, indicating the need for knowledge in multivariable calculus. Mastering these concepts will be crucial for the student's success in their internship.
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help! don't know what to study

so I am a high school student,who has onlly studied basic physics (no AP).
However, I am doing an ice engineering internship this summer, and I want to understand everything in my professors research paper. It seems like its very speciailzed to studying heat, heat transfer, temperature, ect...


part of the research paper is attached...


can someone tell me what/and on what website should I study for my internship??
 

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Look up Thermodynamics Lectures
 


Will you please erase that awful copypasta? There are file sharing servers for free and you can post a link to the original document.
 


I need more in depth/ specialized/advanced information than that
 


sorry i don't know if I am supposed to release too much info from the research paper...but there are some equations there-i hope you can see them, because they reflect the things I need to study
 


Eqn. (4) is called the heat conduction equation. Mathematically, it is a partial differential equation. The methods used for solving these kinds of equations are usually learned in the second part of Mathematical Methods for Physicists courses. Before you can grasp them, you must be very comfortable with both differential and integral calculus.

Every partial differential equation needs some set of boundary conditions and initial conditions to determine its solution uniquely. Here, the boundary conditions are given by eqn. (6). It simply says that there is a fixed heat flux through the left boundary of the film. The initial condition is given by eqn. (7). It simply states that the initial temperature of the film (at time t = 0) was equal everywhere (for all x).

If you want to understand the physics behind these phenomena, you will need to start with a book on Thermal Science, possibly from an engineer's perspective. This is the OpenCourseWare website for such a course in the Mechanical Engineering Department of MIT:

http://ocw.mit.edu/courses/mechanical-engineering/2-51-intermediate-heat-and-mass-transfer-fall-2008/"
 
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i have basic knowledge of calculus.
i thought you only need an initial condition to determine the solution. So I'm assuming that a boundary condition is an additional variable (so I have to understand multivariable calculus)??
 


superaznnerd said:
i have basic knowledge of calculus.
i thought you only need an initial condition to determine the solution. So I'm assuming that a boundary condition is an additional variable (so I have to understand multivariable calculus)??

Yes. PDEs (Partial Differential Equations) require boundary conditions.
 
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