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Exact self-similarity solution of the Navier–Stokes equations for a porous channel with orthogonally moving walls
155
Citations
37
References
2003
Year
Numerical AnalysisSelf-similarity SolutionEngineeringExact Self-similarity SolutionFluid MechanicsPorous Medium EquationsTurbulenceNavier-stokes EquationsBoundary LayerCompressible FlowFluid PropertiesNumerical SimulationPorous ChannelNavier–stokes EquationsGrain RegressionHydrodynamic StabilityNumerical Method For Partial Differential EquationTurbulent Flow Heat TransferMultiscale HydrodynamicsThermo-fluid Systems
This article describes a self-similarity solution of the Navier–Stokes equations for a laminar, incompressible, and time-dependent flow that develops within a channel possessing permeable, moving walls. The case considered here pertains to a channel that exhibits either injection or suction across two opposing porous walls while undergoing uniform expansion or contraction. Instances of direct application include the modeling of pulsating diaphragms, sweat cooling or heating, isotope separation, filtration, paper manufacturing, irrigation, and the grain regression during solid propellant combustion. To start, the stream function and the vorticity equation are used in concert to yield a partial differential equation that lends itself to a similarity transformation. Following this similarity transformation, the original problem is reduced to solving a fourth-order differential equation in one similarity variable η that combines both space and time dimensions. Since two of the four auxiliary conditions are of the boundary value type, a numerical solution becomes dependent upon two initial guesses. In order to achieve convergence, the governing equation is first transformed into a function of three variables: The two guesses and η. At the outset, a suitable numerical algorithm is applied by solving the resulting set of twelve first-order ordinary differential equations with two unspecified start-up conditions. In seeking the two unknown initial guesses, the rapidly converging inverse Jacobian method is applied in an iterative fashion. Numerical results are later used to ascertain a deeper understanding of the flow character. The numerical scheme enables us to extend the solution range to physical settings not considered in previous studies. Moreover, the numerical approach broadens the scope to cover both suction and injection cases occurring with simultaneous wall motion.
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