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Consider the Robin boundary condition for the diffusion/heat equation $\mathrm{u_t=a(t)u_{xx}+f(x,t)}$:

$$\mathrm{-k(t)u_x(0,t)=h(t)u(0,t)}$$

or

$$\mathrm{u_x(0,t)+\frac{h(t)}{k(t)}u(0,t)=0}$$

where $\mathrm{k(t)}$ thermal conductivity and $\mathrm{h(t)}$ heat tranfer coefficient.

My Question: Is it possible that the ratio $\mathrm{h(t)/k(t)}$ to be constant? Could anyone please help me? I have really no idea.

Mahendra Gunawardena
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math
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    Math - Welcome to Egnineering! I'm happy to see your question has already received an answer. For future reference, please close [your original question](http://earthscience.stackexchange.com/questions/4672/ratio-between-heat-tranfer-coefficient-and-thermal-conductivity) before asking again on another site. I understand that Earth Science wasn't the right place for this question, but cross-posting is frowned upon. Easiest to close the original and _then_ re-ask on a different site. –  Apr 10 '15 at 14:16

1 Answers1

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It certainly is possible for the ratio to be constant or very approximately constant. Indeed, it's very much possible for $k$ and $h$ to be constant.

As written, they're only specifically functions of time and could take on just about any form you choose (including a constant value).

One would not commonly encounter $k(t)$, where conductivity is some prescribed function of time (can't think of a way to physically do it off the top of my head). It's more likely to find $k(u(t))$, which is almost always true, but we neglect that if the change is small enough, as the problem becomes non-linear.

Constant $h$ is pretty easy to find, as long as the driving force behind the external flow is constant and any buoyant effects are negligible. Buoyancy will, again make the problem non-linear.

Dan
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