somada141
Member level 1
german bioheat
Hello everyone,
I am back with my favorite topic: FDTD.
In here I will share a piece of knowledge not easily found. Of course this will care only a handful of people so if you're not interested in FDTD and its biomedical applications then you might as well close this post.
I speak of course about the fabled Bioheat Equation (BHE). With it you can calculate the temperature distribution on the human body. However I will not discuss its merits here.
What I will do is attach an excellent paper on using FDTD and the BHE for calculating the temperature distribution on the human head by a mobile phone.
The great thing about this paper (after all this topic has been examined close to 3000 times) is that a stability criterion similar to the EH FDTD time-step criterion (also known as Courant Condition) which lets you calculate the necessary time step for heat transfer applications.
Of course the standard FDTD time step isn't proper for a heat tranfer simulation because:
-> It is incredible small (close to nanoseconds) and would take foerever to do a proper heat tranfer simulation
-> Heat doesn't move with the speed of light
Therefore a new time step is required.
The answer is in this paper.
FDTD Computation of Temperature Rise in the Human Head for Portable Telephones by Jianqing Wang and Osamu Fujiwara
I attach the paper itself here. However since the analysis in the paper is only valid for cubical grids (and because I am feeling generous) I redid the whole analysis for a rectangular grid and post the results in a pdf file here...
I keep contributing and I only want one thing, I want you to call me Adam the FDTD Guru...
Thank you
Hello everyone,
I am back with my favorite topic: FDTD.
In here I will share a piece of knowledge not easily found. Of course this will care only a handful of people so if you're not interested in FDTD and its biomedical applications then you might as well close this post.
I speak of course about the fabled Bioheat Equation (BHE). With it you can calculate the temperature distribution on the human body. However I will not discuss its merits here.
What I will do is attach an excellent paper on using FDTD and the BHE for calculating the temperature distribution on the human head by a mobile phone.
The great thing about this paper (after all this topic has been examined close to 3000 times) is that a stability criterion similar to the EH FDTD time-step criterion (also known as Courant Condition) which lets you calculate the necessary time step for heat transfer applications.
Of course the standard FDTD time step isn't proper for a heat tranfer simulation because:
-> It is incredible small (close to nanoseconds) and would take foerever to do a proper heat tranfer simulation
-> Heat doesn't move with the speed of light
Therefore a new time step is required.
The answer is in this paper.
FDTD Computation of Temperature Rise in the Human Head for Portable Telephones by Jianqing Wang and Osamu Fujiwara
I attach the paper itself here. However since the analysis in the paper is only valid for cubical grids (and because I am feeling generous) I redid the whole analysis for a rectangular grid and post the results in a pdf file here...
I keep contributing and I only want one thing, I want you to call me Adam the FDTD Guru...
Thank you