Next Article in Journal
A Numerical Method for Filtering the Noise in the Heat Conduction Problem
Previous Article in Journal
Generalized Mittag–Leffler Stability of Hilfer Fractional Order Nonlinear Dynamic System
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Article

The Regularity of Solution for Weakly Coupled System Derived by Microwave Heating Model

1
Department of Mathematics, School of Mathematics and Statistics, Guizhou University, Guiyang 550025, Guizhou, China
2
Department of Mathematics, Guizhou Education University, Guiyang 550018, Guizhou, China
3
Department of Mathematics, Guizhou Minzu University, Guiyang 550025, Guizhou, China
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Mathematics 2019, 7(6), 501; https://doi.org/10.3390/math7060501
Submission received: 11 April 2019 / Revised: 23 May 2019 / Accepted: 28 May 2019 / Published: 2 June 2019

Abstract

:
In this paper, we study the regularity of the weak solution of the coupled system derived from the microwave heating model with frequency variable. We first show that the weak solution E of the system is Hölder continuous near the boundary of S = Ω . The main idea of the proof is based on the estimation of linear degenerate system in Campanato space. Then we show that the solution u of the heat conduction equation is Hölder continuous with exponent α 2 . Finally, under the appropriate conditions we show that the coupled system with microwave heating has a weak solution. Moreover the regularity of the weak solution is studied.

1. Introduction

Microwave heating is a kind of heating method that can be converted into heat energy by absorbing microwave energy from an object. As a new type of energy carrier, it has been widely used in many fields such as food heating and thawing, biological sterilization, chemical synthesis and metal smelting (see [1,2,3,4,5]). Compared with the traditional heating mode, microwave heating has the characteristics of short heating time, high efficiency and small thermal inertia. Hence, the automatic control skill is able to be used in microwave heating process. However, due to the internal heat energy generated by the microwave, the heating of some heated stuff may be uneven or even “runaway heating” (see [6,7,8,9,10]). Therefore, it is a meaningful problem to realize uniform heating and minimum energy dissipation in microwave heating process.
The heat produced by microwaves causes the temperature of the heated object to be unevenly distributed. This is partly because various physical parameters such as electric permittivity, electric conductivity and magnetic permeability strongly depend on the temperature. Understanding the complicated dynamic interactions between electric field, magnetic field and temperature is of great important to the system modeling and design process.
If the variable coefficients of Maxwell’s equations are not smooth, it will be difficult to obtain the regularity of the solution for Maxwell’s equations. This also leads to the heat source of heat conduction equation is only belong to L 1 ( Q T ) . Therefore, it is difficult to prove the existence and regularity of solutions. Furthermore, the necessary optimality conditions for optimal control cannot be derived. Under the condition of the coefficient has better smoothness, Yin [9] proved the existence of the solution of the coupled system. But the smoothness of the coefficient is unattainable in the practical problems, even is discontinuity. The study of weak solution to the corresponding coupling system has become a significant problem. At the same time, in order to study necessary optimality conditions of the optimal control problem with frequency variable, we need to study the regularity of the weak solution.
In this paper, we prove that the weak solution of system (4) is continuous. When γ ω is bounded, the real part of γ ω has a positive lower bound and ξ is Lipschitz continuous. Assume that the regularity of the coefficients γ ω and ξ are minimal, then this regularity is optimal. The basic idea is to use Campanato type of estimates(see [11,12]).
We have derived weak coupling mathematical model of microwave heating system with frequency variation in [13]. In paper [13], the existence of global weak solutions is established by assuming suitable conditions. By applying Lax-Milgram theorem and monotone operator theory, the existence and uniqueness of solutions for weakly coupled systems are proved in [13]. However, the regularity of the weak solution has not been studied for the coupled system in [13]. Particularly, we consider the uniformity and boundedness of temperature. In this paper. We study that the temperature is Hölder continuous by appropriate assumptions.The regularity results provide the basis about the derivation of optimal conditions for uniform microwave heating
This paper is organized as follows. In Section 2, for completeness we introduce the mathematical model of microwave heating with frequency variable from [13]. In Section 3, we impose some basic assumptions which ensure the well-posedness of the underlying system. Existence of a weak solution is also established from [13]. In Section 4, some important estimates are derived. In Section 5, regularity of the weak solution is investigated.

2. Weak Coupling Mathematical Model of Microwave Heating System

We consider that the electromagnetic field does not change with temperature during microwave heating. In particular, the distribution of dielectric, permeability, and electric conductivity functions are temperature independent. The frequency of microwave is dependent only on its position x, i.e., ω = ω ( x ) , and has nothing to do with time.
In this paper, we assume that Ω is a bounded simply-connected domain in three-dimensional space R 3 . The boundary of Ω is C 1 continuous. Let Q T = Ω × ( 0 , T ] and S T = Ω × ( 0 , T ] . Hereafter, a bold letter represents a vector in R 3 .
According to literature [13], the microwave heating process can be described by the weakly coupled system of Maxwell equations and heat conduction equations and the corresponding initial boundary value conditions as follows:
× ( γ ( x ) ω ( x ) × E ) + ξ ( x , ω ) E = 0 , ( x , t ) Q T , u t [ k ( x , u ) u ] = 1 2 a 2 ( x , ω ) | E | 2 , ( x , t ) Q T , n × E = n × G , ( x , t ) S T , u n ( x , t ) = 0 , ( x , t ) S T , u ( x , 0 ) = u 0 , x Ω ,
where the unknown functions E ( x , t ) and u ( x , t ) respectively represent the electric field intensity and temperature at time t at x Ω , and n is the outward unit normal vector on S = Ω and u n = u · n is the outward the normal derivative on S = Ω . The G ( · ) is the time-harmonic electromagnetic field generated by the external photoelectric device.
γ ( x ) = 1 μ 0 ( x ) ( μ ( μ ) 2 + ( μ ) 2 + i μ ( μ ) 2 + ( μ ) 2 ) γ 1 ( x ) + i γ 2 ( x ) ,
ξ ( x , ω ) = ε 0 ε ω + i ( ε 0 ε ω + σ ) a 1 ( x , ω ) + i a 2 ( x , ω ) ,
where functions ε , μ and σ represent the dielectric, permeability and electric conductivity respectively.

3. The Well-Posedness of Solution of Weak Coupling System

V ( · ) is the vector valued function in three dimensions.
Definition 1.
(see [14]) H ( c u r l , Ω ) , H ( d i v , Ω ) and H ( c u r l , d i v , Ω ) space
H ( c u r l , Ω ) = { V ( · ) ( L 2 ( Ω ) ) 3 : × V ( L 2 ( Ω ) ) 3 } , H ( d i v , Ω ) = { V ( · ) ( L 2 ( Ω ) ) 3 : · V ( L 2 ( Ω ) ) 3 } , H ( c u r l , d i v , Ω ) = H ( c u r l , Ω ) H ( d i v , Ω ) .
H ( c u r l , Ω ) is the Hilbert space with the following inner product:
V , F = Ω [ ( × V ) · ( × F * ) + V · F * ] d x ,
where F * is the complex conjugate of F (see [9]).
The norm is (derived from inner product)
V H ( c u r l , Ω ) = ( V , V ) H ( c u r l , Ω ) .
We impose some basic assumptions which ensure the well-posedness of the underlying system and proof of regularity.
H(1). The functions u 0 ( · ) and u T ( · ) are nonnegative with u 0 ( · ) and u T ( · ) L 2 ( Ω ) .
H(2). The function k : Ω × R R is given. Suppose that x k ( x , u ) is measurable on Ω for all u R and u k ( x , u ) is uniformly Lipschitz continuous on R for almost all x Ω . The following inequality conditions are satisfied:
0 < k 0 k ( x , u ) k 1 1 ,
for all x Ω , u R with positive constants k 0 and k 1 .
H(3).
(a)
The functions a 1 , a 2 are bounded. Assume that a 1 , a 2 are Lipschity continuous with respect to ω variables. At the same time there is
0 < a 0 a 1 ( x , ω ) , a 2 ( x , ω ) b 0 ,
for some constants a 0 > 0 , b 0 > 0 .
(b)
Assumed that the function γ = 1 μ γ 1 + i γ 2 is a bounded complex function. The real functions
γ 1 ( x ) , γ 2 ( x ) γ 0 > 0 ,
for all x Ω and some constant γ 0 > 0 .
(c)
The function G is given and defined on S T with the extended function G ¯ H ( c u r l , Ω ) . G ¯ is Hölder continuous on Ω , and we have G ¯ ( · , t ) H ( c u r l , Ω ) c 0 G ( · , t ) L 2 ( S ) for all t, where c 0 is a constant that depends only on Ω .
(d)
Assumed that the function ω : Ω R is measurable. Let
U a d = { ω : Ω R is measurable : 0 < ω 0 ω ( x ) ω 1 } ,
where ω 0 and ω 1 are positive constants.
Since the controlled system we are considering is a weakly coupled system. Its heating process can be described by Maxwell equations determining the distribution of its electric field intensity. The intensity of the electric field produces an internal heat source in the heating process, causing the temperature of the heated material to rise. In this way, the material can be heated.
Therefore, in mathematical analysis, we can first study the existence and uniqueness of Maxwell equations. Then we consider the existence and uniqueness of the solution for the initial boundary value problem of heat conduction equation under a given electric field intensity distribution.
We consider the system:
× ( γ ( x ) ω ( x ) × E ) + ξ ( x , ω ( x ) ) E = 0 , ( x , t ) Q T , n × E = n × G , ( x , t ) S T .
From Theorem 3.2. of literature [13], the system (4) exists unique solution E ˜ L ( 0 , T ; H 0 ( c u r l , Ω ) ) for given ω ( · ) U a d .
Next, we study the existence and uniqueness of the solution to the heat conduction equation under a given electric field intensity distribution. Consider the following system:
u t [ k ( x , u ) u ] = 1 2 a 2 ( x , ω ( x ) ) | E | 2 , ( x , t ) Q T , u n ( x , t ) = 0 , ( x , t ) S T , u ( x , 0 ) = u 0 ( x ) , x Ω .
Similarly, from Theorem 3.5. of literature [13], there exists a unique solution u W [ 0 , T ] to the problem (5) for any given ω ( · ) U a d and its corresponding solution E L ( 0 , T ; H ( c u r l , Ω ) ) to (4).
In conclusion, the existence and uniqueness theorem (see [13] Theorem 3.6) of solutions for the coupled system (1).

4. Estimates of Solution for the Underlying System

Definition 2.
(A weighted Sobolev Space) Let ξ L ( Ω ) with | ξ ( x ) | ξ 0 for some constant ξ > 0 . Set
H 0 ( c u r l , d i v ξ , Ω ) = { V H 0 ( c u r l , Ω ) : d i v ( ξ V ) ( L 2 ( Ω ) ) 3 } ,
with the norm
V H 0 ( c u r l , d i v ξ , Ω ) 2 = Ω | × V ) | 2 + | ( ξ V ) | 2 + | V | 2 d x .
The space H 0 ( c u r l , d i v ξ , Ω ) is a Banach space. Moreover, the embedding operator from H 0 ( c u r l , d i v ξ , Ω ) into L 2 ( Ω ) is compact (see [15]).
For all x 0 Ω and ρ > 0 , we set
B ( x 0 , ρ ) = { x Ω : | x x 0 | < ρ } .
Definition 3.
(Campanato space L 2 , μ ( Ω ) ) Let function f in L 2 ( Ω ) and a nonengative constant μ 0 . Set
L 2 , μ ( Ω ) = { f ( x ) L 2 ( Ω ) : f L 2 , μ ( Ω ) = f L 2 ( Ω ) + [ f ] 2 , μ < } ,
with the semi-norm
[ f ] 2 , μ = sup ρ > 0 , x 0 Ω ρ μ B ( x 0 , ρ ) | f ( f ) x 0 | 2 d x ,
where
( f ) x 0 = 1 B ( x 0 , ρ ) B ( x 0 , ρ ) f ( x ) d x .
The space L 2 , μ ( Ω ) is a Banach space (see [11]). It has the following properties (see [11,12]).
Lemma 4.
For μ ( n , n + 2 ) , the space L 2 , μ ( Ω ) is equivalent to C α ( Ω ¯ ) , where α = μ n 2 .
For weakly coupled systems, we first consider the regularity of the solution to the linear Maxwell Equations (4). Let
F = × ( γ ( x ) ω ( x ) × G ) + ξ ( x , ω ( x ) ) G .
Lemma 5.
Under the assumption H(3), let q ( x ) = γ ( x ) ω ( x ) = q 1 ( x ) + i q 2 ( x ) , ξ ( x , ω ( x ) ) = ξ 1 ( x ) + i ξ 2 ( x ) for any ω U a d . There exists positive constant α 0 and β 0 such that
q 1 ( x ) , q 2 ( x ) , γ 1 ( x ) , γ 2 ( x ) α 0 > 0 ,
q L ( Ω ) + ξ L ( Ω ) β 0 ,
and there exists a positive constant B 0 such that
F L 2 ( Ω ) B 0 ,
for F L 2 ( Ω ) .
The System (4) is degenerate. The classical regularity theory for elliptic system is not valid here. We will prove Hölder continuous of the solution for System (4). The following Lemma plays a key role in the following proof.
Lemma 6.
(see [16] Lemma 3.3) Let F H ( d i v , Ω ) with d i v F = 0 . There exist vector field V ( x ) such that
× V = F , i n Ω , · V = 0 , i n Ω , n · V = 0 , o n S ,
and
V H 1 ( Ω ) C 3 F L 2 ( Ω ) ,
V L 2 , 2 ( Ω ) C 3 F L 2 ( Ω ) ,
where C 3 depends only on Ω.

5. Regularity of Weak Solution

Theorem 7.
Under the assumptionH(3), then the weak solution E of the System (4) is Hölder continuous in Ω ¯ for any ω U a d , and there exists a constant C 4 > 0 such that
E C α ( Ω ¯ ) C 4 ,
where C 4 depends only on known data.
Proof. 
Let E ˜ = E G . From (4), we know that E ˜ satisfies the following equations
× ( γ ( x ) ω ( x ) × E ˜ ) + ξ ( x , ω ( x ) ) E ˜ = F , x Ω , n × E ˜ = 0 , x S .
From the existence theorem (see [13] Theorem 3.2.) of solutions, the System (12) has a unique solution E ˜ H ( c u r l , Ω ) .
We prove that there is μ ( 1 , 2 ) such that
× E ˜ L 2 , μ ( Ω ) ,
· E ˜ L 2 , μ ( Ω ) ,
and
· E ˜ L 2 , μ ( Ω ) + × E ˜ L 2 , μ ( Ω ) C .
where C depends only on known data.
From the System (12), we know
d i v ( ξ E ˜ F ) = 0 .
From Lemma 6, we know that there exists a potential vector field V ( x ) such that
ξ E ˜ F = × V , x Ω , · V = 0 , x Ω , n × V = 0 , x S .
Moreover
V H 1 ( Ω ) + V L 2 , 2 ( Ω ) C ( E ˜ L 2 ( Ω ) + F L 2 ( Ω ) ) ,
where C depends only on Ω and the upper bound of ξ .
Substitute V ( x ) into Equations (12), and we have
× ( γ ( x ) ω ( x ) × E ˜ V ) = 0 , x Ω , n × E ˜ = 0 , x S , n · V = 0 , x S .
From the boundary condition n × E ˜ = 0 , we have
n · ( × E ˜ ) = 0 , x S .
For any smooth function Ψ C ( Ω ) , we can use Gauss’s divergence theorem to get
Ω n · ( × E ˜ ) Ψ d s = Ω ( ( × E ˜ ) Ψ ) d x = Ω ( × E ˜ ) · Ψ d x = S ( n × E ˜ ) · Ψ d s = 0 .
Hence,
n · ( × E ˜ ) = 0 , x Ω .
Since Ω is simply-connected, there exists the potential function Ψ ( x ) . The following equation holds
γ ( x ) ω ( x ) × E ˜ V = Ψ , x Ω .
Therefore,
× E ˜ = ω ( x ) γ ( x ) [ Ψ + V ] , x Ω .
By calculation
· [ ω ( x ) γ ( x ) ( Ψ + V ) ] = 0 , x Ω , n · [ γ ( x ) ω ( x ) × E ˜ ] = 0 , x S , n · V = 0 , x S ,
that is
n · ( Ψ ) = n · ( ω ( x ) γ ( x ) × E ˜ V ) = 0 , x Ω .
From γ ( x ) ω ( x ) has a positive lower bound, we use L 2 ( Ω ) -theory of elliptic equations to get
Ψ H 1 ( Ω ) C V L 2 ( Ω ) .
where C depends only on known data.
According to the estimate of Campanato space L 2 , μ ( Ω ) , we see that there exist μ ( 1 , 2 ) such that
Ψ L 2 , μ ( Ω ) C ( V L 2 , μ ( Ω ) + Ψ H 1 ( Ω ) ) .
which is bounded from the estimate for V ( x ) .
From the Equations (15), one can see that
× E ˜ L 2 , μ ( Ω ) C Ψ L 2 , μ ( Ω ) .
On the other hand, from (13) we know
( ξ ( x ) E ˜ ) = 0 .
From the boundedness of ξ ( x ) , we have
B ρ | · E ˜ | 2 d x C B ρ | E ˜ | 2 d x ,
for x Ω and ρ > 0 , where B ρ is B ρ Ω and E ˜ H 1 ( Ω ) .
From Lemma 4, we know that E ˜ L 2 , 2 ( Ω ) and
sup ρ > 0 , x 0 Ω ρ 2 B ρ | · E ˜ | d x C .
From what has been discussed above, we get
· E ˜ L 2 , μ × E ˜ L 2 , μ
and
· E ˜ L 2 , μ ( Ω ) + × E ˜ L 2 , μ ( Ω ) C F L 2 , μ ( Ω ) ,
where C only depends on the known data constant, i.e.,
E ˜ L 2 , 2 + μ ( Ω ) C F L 2 , μ ( Ω ) .
From Lemma 4, the space dimension n = 3 and μ 0 = 2 + μ > 3 . We see that
E ˜ C α ( Ω ¯ ) ,
where α = μ n 2 > 0 . Hence E ˜ is Hölder continuous.
Let E ˜ = E G , we have E = E ˜ + G . From the hypothesis of G in assumption H(3), we know that
E C α ( Ω ¯ ) .
 ☐
Next we study the regularity of the heat conduction equation. Let
Q ( x 0 , t 0 ; ρ ) = B ( x 0 , ρ ) × ( t 0 ρ , t 0 ] , ( x 0 , t 0 ) Q T ,
for B ( x 0 , ρ ) . One has a similar result to Lemma 4 with dimension n replaced by n + 1 .
We consider the following parabolic equation
u t L [ u ] = f 0 ( x , t ) + i = 1 n ( f i ( x , t ) ) x i , ( x , t ) Q T , u n ( x , t ) = 0 , ( x , t ) S T , u ( x , 0 ) = u 0 ( x ) , x Ω ,
where
L [ u ] = ( a i j ( x , t ) u x i ) x j + b i ( x , t ) u x i + c ( x , t ) u .
The following basic assumptions are needed.
H(4).
(a)
Let a i j ( x , t ) be measurable in Q T and satisfy the following conditions for ellipticity:
a 1 | ξ | 2 a i j ξ i ξ j a 2 | ξ | 2 , ξ R n , a 1 , a 2 > 0 .
(b)
Let b i ( x , t ) and c i ( x , t ) belong to L ( Q T ) with
i = 1 n b i L ( Q T ) + c L ( Q T ) A 3 .
(c)
Let
f 0 ( x , t ) L 2 , ( μ 2 ) + ( Q T ) , f i ( x , t ) L 2 , μ ( Q T ) ,
for some μ > 0 .
Lemma 8.
(see [17]) Under the assumption H(4), the solution u C ( [ 0 , T ] ; H 1 ( Ω ) ) of the general parabolic equation satisfies the following estimate:
u L 2 , μ ( Q T ) C ( f 0 L 2 , ( μ 2 ) + ( Q T ) + i = 1 n f i L 2 , μ ( Q T ) ,
where C is a constant depending only on known data a 1 , a 2 , A 3 and Q T . In particular, there is
u C α , α 2 ( Q ¯ T ) ,
for μ ( n , n + 2 ) , where α = μ n 2 .
Remark 9.
The significance of Lemma 8 is that when μ ( n + 2 , n + 4 ) , the condition f 0 , f i for the continuity of Hölder of the weak solution are weaker than that of the classical result. (see [18,19,20]).
Theorem 10.
Under the assumpotions of H(1), H(2), H(3) and H(4), There exists unique weak solution ( E , u ) for the coupled System (1) with
E G L ( 0 , T ; H 0 ( c u r l , Ω ) ) , u C ( [ 0 , T ] ; H 1 ( Ω ) ) .
Moreover, the weak solution possesses the following regularity:
× E L ( 0 , T ; L 2 , μ 0 ( Ω ) ) , u L 2 , μ 0 + 2 ( Q T ) .
In particular,
u C α , α 2 ( Q ¯ T ) ,
where α = μ 0 1 2 .
Proof. 
From Theorem 3.6. of literature [13], we know that there exists the solution ( E , u ) for coupled system (1) with
E G L ( 0 , T ; H 0 ( curl , Ω ) ) , u C ( [ 0 , T ] ; H 1 ( Ω ) ) .
We assume that G ( x , t ) = 0 on Ω . Otherwise, we define
E ^ = E G .
From Theorem 7, we have
E C α ( Ω ¯ ) ,
for any given t [ 0 , T ] . Moreover
E ( · , t ) C α ( Ω ¯ ) C , × E L 2 , 2 + μ ( Ω ¯ ) C .
Now we think that k ( x , u ) is independent of u. Let k ( x , u ) = k ˜ ( x ) , we use L 2 , μ theory of parabolic equation and Lemma 8. We have
u L 2 , 2 + μ 0 ( Q T ) C × E L 2 , 2 + μ ( Q T ) .
From the standard embedding (see [19]), we have
u L 2 , μ + 4 ( Q T ) .
For μ ( 1 , 2 ) , we have μ + 4 ( 5 , 7 ) . Therefore
u C α , α 2 ( Q ¯ T ) ,
where α = μ 1 2 .
In the case of k = k ( x , u ) , we have
u C 1 + α , 1 + α 2 ( Q ¯ T ) .
Since k ( x , u ) is smooth, we can use Schauder’s theorem to get the following result
u C 2 + α , 1 + α 2 ( Q ¯ T ) .
 ☐
Remark 11.
The necessary optimality conditions for the optimal control problem in the microwave heating process will be carried out in a separate paper.

6. Conclusions

In this paper, we study the regularity of the weak solution of the coupled system derived from the microwave heating model with frequency variable. The distribution of dielectric, permeability, and electric conductivity functions are temperature independent. The frequency of microwave is dependent only on its position x, i.e., ω = ω ( x ) , and has nothing to do with time. We established that the temperature is Hölder continuous, even if electric conductivity has a jump discontinuity with respect to the temperature change. This paper presents a method that is based on the estimation of linear degenerate system in the Campanato space. We use this idea to deal with time harmonic Maxwell equations with rough coefficients. On the other hand, by using the regularity results of the coupled system, the necessary optimality conditions for uniform microwave heating in three directions are derived.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, Y.L. and W.W.; methodology, Y.L.; validation, Y.L.; writing—original draft preparation, Y.L.; writing—review and editing, Y.L.; supervision, W.W.; funding acquisition, W.W. and Y.L.

Funding

This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Nos.11761021); Department of Science and Technology of Guizhou Province (Fundamental Research Program [2018]1118); Guizhou Education University “2017 school-class first-class university construction project (first-class teaching team ’mathematical modeling and data mining teaching team’)” (Guizhou Education University Nos.[2018] 100); Key Disciplines of Guizhou Province - Computer Science and Technology (ZDXK [2018]007).

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

References

  1. Chandrasekaran, S.; Ramanathan, S.; Basak, T. Microwave material processing-a review. AIChE J. 2012, 58, 330–363. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  2. Osepchuk, J.M. A History of Microwave Heating Applications. IEEE Trans. Microw. Theory Tech. 2003, 32, 1200–1224. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  3. Resurreccion, F.P.; Tang, J.; Pedrow, P.; Cavalieri, R.; Liu, F.; Tang, Z. Development of a computer simulation model for processing food in a microwave assisted thermal sterilization (MATS) system. J. Food Eng. 2013, 118, 406–416. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  4. Rattanadecho, P.; Makul, N. Microwave-Assisted Drying: A Review of the State-of-the-Art. Dry. Technol. 2016, 34, 38. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  5. Singh, S.; Gupta, D.; Jain, V.; Sharma, A.K. Microwave Processing of Materials and Applications in Manufacturing Industries: A Review. Adv. Manuf. Process. 2015, 30, 29. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  6. Kriegsmann, G.A. Microwave heating of ceramic: A mathematical theory, Microwaves: Theory and Applications in Microwave Proceeing. Ceram. Trans. 1991, 21, 177–183. [Google Scholar]
  7. Pelletier, M.G.; Viera, J.A. Low-Cost Electronic Microwave Calibration for Rapid On-Line Moisture Sensing of Seedcotton. Sensors 2010, 10, 11088–11099. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  8. Lacey, A.A. Thermal runaway in a nonlocal problem modelling Ohmic heating: Part I: Model derivation and some special cases. Eur. J. Appl. Math. 1995, 6, 127–144. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  9. Yin, H.M.; Wei, W. Regularity of weak solution for a coupled system arising from a microwave heating model. Eur. J. Appl. Math. 2014, 25, 117–131. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  10. Yin, H.M.; Wei, W. A Nonlinear Optimal Control Problem Arising from a Sterilization Process for Packaged Foods. Appl. Math. Opt. 2016, 75, 1–15. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  11. Troianiello, G.M. Elliptic Differential Equations and Obstacle Problems; Plenum Press: New York, NY, USA, 1987. [Google Scholar]
  12. Giaquinta, M. Multiple Integrals in the Calculus of Variation and Nonlinear Elliptic Systems, Annals of Mathematics Studies; Princeton University Press: Princeton, NJ, USA, 1983. [Google Scholar]
  13. Liao, Y.M.; Wei, W. Existence of Solution of a Microwave Heating Model and Associated Optimal Frequency Control Problems. J. Ind. Manag. Opt. 2019. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  14. Wei, W.; Yin, H.M.; Tang, J.M. An Optimal Control Problem for Microwave Heating. Nonlinear Anal. TMA 2012, 75, 2024–2036. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  15. Hazard, C.; Lenoir, M. On the Solution of Time-Harmonic Scattering Problems for Maxwell’s Equations. SIAM J. Math. Anal. 1996, 27, 1597–1630. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  16. Yin, H.M. Regularity of weak solution to Maxwell’s equations and applications to microwave heating. J. Differ. Equ. 2004, 200, 137–161. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  17. Yin, H.M. L2,μ-theory for linear parabolic equations. J. Partial Differ. Equ. 1997, 10, 31–44. [Google Scholar]
  18. Adams, R.A.; Fournier, J.F. Sobolev Spaces, 2nd ed.; Academic Press: Cambridge, MA, USA, 2003. [Google Scholar]
  19. Chen, Y.Z. The Second-Order Parabolic Equations; Peking University Press: Beijing, China, 2003. [Google Scholar]
  20. Lieberman, G.M. Second Order Parabolic Differential Equations; World Scientific: Singapore, 1996. [Google Scholar]

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Liao, Y.; Wei, W. The Regularity of Solution for Weakly Coupled System Derived by Microwave Heating Model. Mathematics 2019, 7, 501. https://doi.org/10.3390/math7060501

AMA Style

Liao Y, Wei W. The Regularity of Solution for Weakly Coupled System Derived by Microwave Heating Model. Mathematics. 2019; 7(6):501. https://doi.org/10.3390/math7060501

Chicago/Turabian Style

Liao, Yumei, and Wei Wei. 2019. "The Regularity of Solution for Weakly Coupled System Derived by Microwave Heating Model" Mathematics 7, no. 6: 501. https://doi.org/10.3390/math7060501

Note that from the first issue of 2016, this journal uses article numbers instead of page numbers. See further details here.

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop