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Efficient simulation of rarefied gas flow past a particle: a boundary element method for the linearized G13 equations

Efficient simulation of rarefied gas flow past a particle: a boundary element method for the linearized G13 equations
Efficient simulation of rarefied gas flow past a particle: a boundary element method for the linearized G13 equations

We develop a novel boundary integral formulation for the steady linearized form of Grad's 13-moment (G13) equations applied to a uniform flow of rarefied gas past solid objects at low Mach numbers. Changing variables leads to a system of boundary integral equations that combines integral equations from Stokes flow and potential theory. The strong coupling between the stress deviator and heat flux featured by the G13 equations demands adding a boundary integral equation for the pressure. We specialize the integral equations for an axisymmetric flow with no swirl and derive the axisymmetric fundamental solutions for the pressure equation, seemingly absent in the Stokes-flow literature. Using the boundary element method to achieve a numerical solution, we apply this formulation to streaming flow of rarefied gas past prolate or oblate spheroids with their axis of symmetry parallel to the free stream, considering various aspect ratios and Knudsen numbers - the ratio of the molecules' mean free path to the macroscopic length scale. After validating the method, we obtain the surface profiles of the deviations from the unperturbed state of the traction, heat flux, pressure, temperature, and slip velocity, as well as the drag on the spheroid, observing convergence with the number of elements. Rarefaction phenomena, such as temperature jump and polarization, Knudsen effects in the drag, and velocity slippage, are predicted. This method opens a new path for investigating other gas non-equilibrium phenomena that can be modeled by the same set of equations, such as thermophoresis, and has application in nano- and microfluidics.

1070-6631
Padrino, Juan C.
961f9d2a-ee9d-4619-a267-2bf098612978
Sprittles, James E.
365f38f8-bae2-4e46-a0fe-f155d72b73b5
Lockerby, Duncan A.
112377bd-f66c-4bbe-9703-250f949ba76d
Padrino, Juan C.
961f9d2a-ee9d-4619-a267-2bf098612978
Sprittles, James E.
365f38f8-bae2-4e46-a0fe-f155d72b73b5
Lockerby, Duncan A.
112377bd-f66c-4bbe-9703-250f949ba76d

Padrino, Juan C., Sprittles, James E. and Lockerby, Duncan A. (2022) Efficient simulation of rarefied gas flow past a particle: a boundary element method for the linearized G13 equations. Physics of Fluids, 34 (6), [062011]. (doi:10.1063/5.0091041).

Record type: Article

Abstract

We develop a novel boundary integral formulation for the steady linearized form of Grad's 13-moment (G13) equations applied to a uniform flow of rarefied gas past solid objects at low Mach numbers. Changing variables leads to a system of boundary integral equations that combines integral equations from Stokes flow and potential theory. The strong coupling between the stress deviator and heat flux featured by the G13 equations demands adding a boundary integral equation for the pressure. We specialize the integral equations for an axisymmetric flow with no swirl and derive the axisymmetric fundamental solutions for the pressure equation, seemingly absent in the Stokes-flow literature. Using the boundary element method to achieve a numerical solution, we apply this formulation to streaming flow of rarefied gas past prolate or oblate spheroids with their axis of symmetry parallel to the free stream, considering various aspect ratios and Knudsen numbers - the ratio of the molecules' mean free path to the macroscopic length scale. After validating the method, we obtain the surface profiles of the deviations from the unperturbed state of the traction, heat flux, pressure, temperature, and slip velocity, as well as the drag on the spheroid, observing convergence with the number of elements. Rarefaction phenomena, such as temperature jump and polarization, Knudsen effects in the drag, and velocity slippage, are predicted. This method opens a new path for investigating other gas non-equilibrium phenomena that can be modeled by the same set of equations, such as thermophoresis, and has application in nano- and microfluidics.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 14 May 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 17 June 2022
Published date: 17 June 2022

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 509994
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/509994
ISSN: 1070-6631
PURE UUID: aa008123-5976-44bd-9773-583cb75028d7
ORCID for Juan C. Padrino: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6373-3469

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Date deposited: 13 Mar 2026 17:30
Last modified: 14 Mar 2026 03:23

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Contributors

Author: Juan C. Padrino ORCID iD
Author: James E. Sprittles
Author: Duncan A. Lockerby

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