Theoretical Approaches to the Heating of an Extensive Homogeneous Plate with Convective Cooling
Abstract
1. Introduction
- Energy in a very thin layer absorption of pulse,
- Homogeneity and isotropy of the slab material,
- Invariance of the property with temperature under experimental conditions;
- Uniform absorption of the pulse at the front surface,
- Infinitesimally short duration of the pulse;
- One-dimensional heat flow,
- No heat loss from the surfaces of the slab.
2. Mathematical Model
2.1. Problem Definition
- The slab has constant material parameters: thermal conductivity (), specific heat () and density ();
- The thickness of the slab () is constant and significantly smaller than its lateral dimensions;
- Heating occurs unilaterally and uniformly with a heat flux in the form of a rectangular pulse, having an intensity and duration , switched on at time ;
- The heat transfer between the plate and its surroundings occurs via convection, with a heat transfer coefficient on the heated side and on the opposite side;
- The initial temperature of the plate is equal to the ambient temperature , which is constant in both time and space.

2.2. Governing Equations
2.3. Literature Review for Solutions to Similar Problems
3. Results
3.1. Preliminary Remarks
3.2. Solution Obtained by Method of Separation of Variables
3.3. Solution Obtained by Means of Using the Laplace Transform
4. Discussion
4.1. Analysis of the Solution Obtained Using the Method of Separation of Variables
4.1.1. Values of the Components of the Solution
4.1.2. Analysis of the Truncation Error in Solution (16)
4.2. Analysis of the Solution Represented by Heat Waves
4.2.1. Influence of Successive Waves on the Solution Presented in Equation (23)
4.2.2. Approximations for Short Times
4.2.3. Numerical Evaluation of the Function
4.3. Comparison of the Two Solutions
4.4. Effect of Cooling Conditions on Relative Temperature Rise
4.4.1. Curves of Relative Temperature Rise on Slab Surfaces
4.4.2. Temperature Differences Between the Front and Rear Sides
5. Experimental Verification—Estimation of Thermal Diffusivity
6. Summary
- The solution obtained by applying the MSV is mathematically uncomplicated, whereas the solution described by heat waves is highly complex, especially for higher-order waves;
- In the limiting case of non-cooling conditions, both solutions require the use of a specific form; moreover, the heat-wave solution also demands a specific form if the cooling conditions are identical on both sides of the plate;
- The truncation error of the number of terms in the solution obtained by applying the MSV decreases rapidly over time after the heating pulse is switched on or off; therefore, the solution is most appropriate for sufficiently long times after the last change in boundary conditions;
- The wave number truncation error increases over time after the heating pulse is switched on; as a result, this solution is most effective for times that are sufficiently short after the first change in boundary conditions;
- The truncation error in both cases increases as the Biot numbers become smaller;
- The truncation error in the MSV method is smaller on the back side.
- The temperature value at the rear surface remains invariant due to the swap;
- The time required to reach maximum on the rear surface and the value of this maximum decrease as the Biot numbers increase;
- The temperature equalization between the slab sides occurs more slowly as the difference between the Biot numbers becomes greater.
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Derivation of Formulae (16) and (22)
Appendix B. Derivation of Formula (23)
Appendix C. Notes on Eigenvalues

Appendix D. Model Implemented in Matlab Code
- % ---- Matlab code ----
- % heating and cooling of a homogeneous plate of a given thickness
- % as subjected to a constant force on the front side by rectangular pulse of known duration
- % method of separation of variables used to solve the problem
- % v1.0 created on 10 August 2025
- % plate parameters:
- % d—thickness, m
- % a—thermal diffusivity, m2/s
- % lambda—thermal conductivity, W/(m*K)
- % conditions:
- % To—initial temperature, °C
- % v—air velocity, m/s
- % power—forcing flux intensity, W
- % area—effective area of irradiation, m2
- % freq—sampling frequency, Hz
- % outputs: temperature increase over time for
- % dzeta = 0—heated (front side),
- % dzeta = (0,1)—inside the plate
- % dzeta = 1—unheated (back) side
- % th = 2—heating time, sec
- % tc = 58—cooling time sec
- % ---------------------------------------------------
- % PMMA—an example of material and parameters of measurements
- a = 1.05e-7; % PMMA
- lambda = 0.15; % PMMA
- d = 0.001;
- To = 25;
- power = 2500;
- area = 0.2*0.2;
- freq = 29.97;
- th = 10; % heating time in sec
- tc = 50; % cooling time in sec
- v = 0.2;
- dzeta = 1; % 0—for heated (front) side, 1—for unheated (back) side
- % --- calculations ---
- Alfa = 12.12 − 1.16*v + 11.6*sqrt(v);
- alfa1 = alfa % heat transfer coefficient, W/(m2*K)
- alfa2 = alfa
- Bi1 = alfa1*d/lambda + 0.001; % Biot number (Equation (12))
- Bi2 = alfa2*d/lambda + 0.001;
- tt = th + tc; % total time, sec
- Th = power*d/lambda; % ((Equation (12))
- tau = d^2/a; % ((Equation (12))
- tg = th*round(freq); % number of samples for heating phase
- N_terms = 20;
- theta_ss = (1+Bi2*(1-dzeta))/(Bi1+Bi2+Bi1*Bi2); % ((Equation (17))
- % ny = n*pi+atan(Bi1/ny)+atan(Bi2/ny); ((Equation (18))
- f = @(ny, n, Bi1, Bi2) ny—n*pi—atan(Bi1/ny)- atan(Bi2/ny);
- for n = 0:N_terms-1,
- If n == 0
- initial_value = n*pi + pi/2; % (conclusion from Appendix C)
- end
- [ny, fval, exitflag, output] = fsolve(@(ny) f(ny, n, Bi1, Bi2), initial_value);
- ny_n(n + 1) = ny;
- beta = atan(Bi1/ny); % ((Equation (19))
- beta_n(n + 1)=beta;
- theta = 2/(ny*sqrt(Bi1^2 + ny^2))/(Bi1/(Bi1^2 + ny^2) + Bi2/(Bi2^2 + ny^2) + 1); % ((Equation (20))
- theta_n(n + 1) = theta;
- psi = cos(ny*dzeta-beta);
- psi_n(n + 1) = psi;
- end
- % heating phase
- for t = 0:th*round(freq) − 1
- theta(t + 1) = theta_ss-sum(theta_n.*psi_n.*exp(-ny_n.^2*t/tau/freq));
- end
- % cooling phase
- for t = th*round(freq):tt*round(freq)-1
- theta(t + 1) = sum(theta_n.*psi_n.*(1-exp(-ny_n.^2*tg/tau/freq)).*exp(-ny_n.^2*(t-tg)/tau/freq));
- end
- temp = To + Th*theta; % ((Equation (15))
- plot(temp);
- %—end of code -
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| Feature | MSV Solution (16) | Heat-Wave Solution (23) |
|---|---|---|
| Mathematical accuracy | Yes | |
| Generality of the solution | A specific formula is required for the case Bi1 = Bi2 = 0 | Specific formulae are required when Bi1 and Bi2 are equal or coincide with 0 |
| Mathematical complexity | Low—simple, identical formulae for all terms of the series | High—formulae of increasing complexity for successive heat waves |
| Dependence on Bi1 and Bi2 | Implicit—a transcendental equation must be solved to determine the eigenvalues | Explicit |
| Truncation error versus time | With a shorter time after the heating is switched on or off, a greater number of terms is required | The longer the time after the heat is switched on, the more waves are required |
| Truncation error versus the observation point | The front/rear surface results in the largest/smallest value | An odd/even number of waves results in a smaller error on the front/rear surface |
| Truncation error versus the Biot numbers | As the Biot numbers decrease, the truncation error increases | |
| Application scope | A sufficiently long time after switching the heating on or off (the impact of successive terms gradually decreases) | A sufficiently short time after the heating is switched on (the impact of successive waves increases over time) |
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Jabłoński, P.; Kasprzak, T.; Gryś, S.; Minkina, W. Theoretical Approaches to the Heating of an Extensive Homogeneous Plate with Convective Cooling. Energies 2025, 18, 4785. https://doi.org/10.3390/en18174785
Jabłoński P, Kasprzak T, Gryś S, Minkina W. Theoretical Approaches to the Heating of an Extensive Homogeneous Plate with Convective Cooling. Energies. 2025; 18(17):4785. https://doi.org/10.3390/en18174785
Chicago/Turabian StyleJabłoński, Paweł, Tomasz Kasprzak, Sławomir Gryś, and Waldemar Minkina. 2025. "Theoretical Approaches to the Heating of an Extensive Homogeneous Plate with Convective Cooling" Energies 18, no. 17: 4785. https://doi.org/10.3390/en18174785
APA StyleJabłoński, P., Kasprzak, T., Gryś, S., & Minkina, W. (2025). Theoretical Approaches to the Heating of an Extensive Homogeneous Plate with Convective Cooling. Energies, 18(17), 4785. https://doi.org/10.3390/en18174785

