Physical Review E Statistical Nonlinear and Soft Matter Physics, Volume 72, Issue 4 , 01/10/2005

Mathematical analysis of thermal diffusion shock waves

Vitalyi Gusev, Walter Craig, Roberto Livoti, Sorasak Danworaphong, Gerald J. Diebold

Abstract

Thermal diffusion, also known as the Ludwig-Soret effect, refers to the separation of mixtures in a temperature gradient. For a binary mixture the time dependence of the change in concentration of each species is governed by a nonlinear partial differential equation in space and time. Here, an exact solution of the Ludwig-Soret equation without mass diffusion for a sinusoidal temperature field is given. The solution shows that counterpropagating shock waves are produced which slow and eventually come to a halt. Expressions are found for the shock time for two limiting values of the starting density fraction. The effects of diffusion on the development of the concentration profile in time and space are found by numerical integration of the nonlinear differential equation. © 2005 The American Physical Society.

Document Type

Article

Source Type

Journal

ASJC Subject Area

Physics and Astronomy : Condensed Matter PhysicsPhysics and Astronomy : Statistical and Nonlinear PhysicsMathematics : Statistics and Probability


Bibliography


Gusev, V., Craig, W., Livoti, R., Danworaphong, S., & Diebold, G. (2005). Mathematical analysis of thermal diffusion shock waves. Physical Review E Statistical Nonlinear and Soft Matter Physics, 72(4) doi:10.1103/PhysRevE.72.041205

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