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Laser heating of tissue / axis symmetric pde problem
Posted 05.04.2010, 11:08 GMT-4 2 Replies
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Hello!
I'm modelling the heating of tissue with a laser, and based on some papers and discussions I've read, I've been able to model this in 2D with two coefficient form PDE models coupled to a transient heat conduction model.
The first coefficient form PDE is used to model the Arrhenius damage integral which calculates damage = ln(percent damaged cells) = integral of 1/Temperature over time.
The second coefficient form PDE models light transport of the laser in the tissue which I assume is a simple exponential decay into the tissue (absorption dominated, negligible scatter). The light absorbed serves as the heating term for the heat model.
The standard heat conduction model is used for heat diffusion in the tissue.
This all seems to work fine in 2D, except that it really doesn't represent the physical situation, because the 2D symmetry implies that the model extends infinitely in and out of the screen.
What I really want is an axis symmetric model, symmetric around the center of the "cylindrical" laser beam. Now, there is a 2D axis symmetric geometry for the heat conduction model, but none for the coefficient form PDE modes.
I suppose I can model everything in full blown 3D, however, the model is already pretty slow to solve in 2D.
Any advice how how to do this? Please help.
Thanks in advance!
-ilu
I'm modelling the heating of tissue with a laser, and based on some papers and discussions I've read, I've been able to model this in 2D with two coefficient form PDE models coupled to a transient heat conduction model.
The first coefficient form PDE is used to model the Arrhenius damage integral which calculates damage = ln(percent damaged cells) = integral of 1/Temperature over time.
The second coefficient form PDE models light transport of the laser in the tissue which I assume is a simple exponential decay into the tissue (absorption dominated, negligible scatter). The light absorbed serves as the heating term for the heat model.
The standard heat conduction model is used for heat diffusion in the tissue.
This all seems to work fine in 2D, except that it really doesn't represent the physical situation, because the 2D symmetry implies that the model extends infinitely in and out of the screen.
What I really want is an axis symmetric model, symmetric around the center of the "cylindrical" laser beam. Now, there is a 2D axis symmetric geometry for the heat conduction model, but none for the coefficient form PDE modes.
I suppose I can model everything in full blown 3D, however, the model is already pretty slow to solve in 2D.
Any advice how how to do this? Please help.
Thanks in advance!
-ilu
2 Replies Last Post 02.05.2011, 22:28 GMT-4