1. Introduction
From the pioneering works of Reynolds [
1], Maxwell [
2] and Knudsen [
3,
4] it is known that a gas flow is generated through a capillary if the temperature is different at its ends, and this flow is directed toward the hot extremity of the capillary. This phenomenon is called the thermal transpiration or thermal creep and the mass flow rate generated by applying a temperature gradient along the capillary walls is called the temperature driven mass flow rate, denoted in the following by
. If the capillary is settled between two reservoirs of finite volumes maintained at different temperatures and initially at the same pressure, first a temperature driven flow is generated from the cold to the hot side, then it is counterbalanced by the Poiseuille flow, denoted in the following by
, since the pressure in the hot reservoir becomes higher than in the cold one. The system comes to an equilibrium when the Poiseuille mass flow rate matches the temperature driven mass flow rate,
, making the total mass flow rate between the reservoirs equal to zero. The pressure difference between the reservoirs, which corresponds to this final stage, is called the
Thermal molecular Pressure Difference (TPD). These phenomena become important when a gas flowing through a capillary is rarefied, i.e., the ratio between the molecular mean free path,
, and a characteristic flow dimension,
a, (in this case the capillary radius) called the Knudsen number,
, is larger than
. Since the Knudsen number is defined as the ratio between two quantities,
and
a, it could be relatively large either when the molecular mean free path is large (low pressure) or when the characteristic flow dimension is small (gas flows in the microsystems). Therefore, the thermal creep phenomenon is important either at low pressure or for the gas flows at small scales.
In the last decades, the property of the TPD generation, due to a temperature gradient applied to a surface, started to be used for the development of microdevices like micro gas sensors [
5,
6], micropumps without moving parts and lubricant fluids [
7,
8,
9,
10] and micro gas chromatography columns [
11,
12,
13]. The information about the TPD can also be used to calculate several physical quantities as the Eucken factor, the rotational collision number [
14] and the heat conductivities of polar and non-polar polyatomic gases [
15].
However, the thermal molecular pressure difference has also a negative effect in the accuracy of the pressure measurements. For example, in order to minimize the zero drift, some of Capacitance Diaphragm Gauges (CDG) are operated keeping the sensor at a higher temperature [
16]. This difference in the temperature between the sensor and the vacuum chamber makes the behavior of the gauge non-linear due to thermal transpiration effects and the pressure readings have to be corrected. The same effect needs to be taken into account when the vapor-pressure thermometry or gas thermometry techniques are used to measure the temperature below 0 °C [
17], due to a large difference in temperature between the vessels where the pressure is measured.
The thermal molecular pressure difference effect depends on several factors [
17]: the nature of the gas and in particular its thermal conductivity; the absolute pressure value; the flow regime (hydrodynamic, transitional or free molecular); the temperature values or the mean temperature and the temperature gradient between the cold and the hot measurement points; the material and the state of the internal surface of the connecting tube.
If one considers all the applications described above, it is clear that an accurate prediction of the TPD is very important in practice. Relying on the results of the kinetic theory, Reynolds pointed out [
1] that in the free molecular flow regime the pressure ratio between the cold and the hot reservoirs is proportional to the square root of the respective reservoir temperatures:
where
and
are the pressures in the cold and the hot reservoirs, respectively;
and
are the corresponding temperatures. Equation (
1) has been derived for two reservoirs connected by an orifice and the probabilities for the molecules to traverse the orifice are equal on its both sides. However, more often, a capillary connects two reservoirs. In this case, the mentioned probability, to a great extent, depends on the surface properties of the tube where the gas molecules collide and on the degree of energy exchange. Under these conditions, the pressure ratio
will be smaller than the ratio predicted by Equation (
1) [
18]
In the above formula, the ratio is usually called the Thermal molecular Pressure Ratio (TPR) and the factor is called the Thermal molecular Pressure Exponent (TPE).
It is difficult to derive a reliable and universal expression based on a well-established theory of the thermal molecular pressure difference effect, in particular in the transitional region, which represents an intermediate regime between the low pressure free molecular flow limit (where Equation (
2) can be used) and the high pressure hydrodynamic flow regime (where Equation (
2) reduces to
).
Maxwell was the first to propose an analytical expression [
2] for the mass flow through a capillary driven by the pressure and temperature gradients. He introduced the concepts of the slip velocity and of the accommodation coefficient, the latter to describe the processes involved in the gas-surface interaction. The formula derived by Maxwell allows one to calculate the TPD assuming the zero final mass flow rate, but it is valid only in the hydrodynamic and slip flow regimes. Later, Knudsen measured the thermal molecular pressure difference of hydrogen at different gas rarefaction conditions and proposed the improved semi-empirical expression for the TPD [
3,
19], satisfying the two limits: Equation (
1) in the free molecular flow regime and the zero TPD in the hydrodynamic region. Several researchers followed the ideas of Knudsen and proposed various semi-empirical formulas to calculate the TPD [
20,
21,
22,
23,
24].
From the experimental results on the thermal molecular pressure difference reported in [
25], it became clear that the Maxwell model for the complete diffuse reflection of the gas molecules from a surface was inappropriate to predict the thermal transpiration phenomenon at arbitrary Knudsen numbers. The author of Ref. [
25] extracted the accommodation coefficient from the experimental data by fitting the expressions for the pressure and temperature driven mass flow rates proposed by Maxwell with a least square method and found that this value is different from 1. However, these results have shown that the thermal molecular pressure difference has little or no dependence on the gas-surface interaction: all the tested gases converged towards the same value. These findings were in good agreement with those reported in Ref. [
26], where the thermal transpiration problem was analyzed numerically with arbitrary accommodation at the surface, always in the frame of the Maxwell diffuse-specular kernel.
Applying the Maxwell scattering kernel to calculate the TPD in the free-molecular regime, one obtains that the exponent
is equal to 0.5 for any value of the accommodation coefficient. However, the authors of Ref. [
27], by studying experimentally the thermal transpiration flow with ultrahigh vacuum techniques, concluded that the theoretical value of
, predicted by Reynolds (Equation (
1)) is effectively never reached and that lower values of
, between
and
, are possible.
The application of a more realistic scattering kernel, compared to the Maxwell one, as the Cercignani-Lampis (CL) model, allows one to improve the understanding of the gas-wall interaction properties for thermal creep flows. The author of Ref. [
28] applied the Cercignani-Lampis boundary conditions to the linearized Shakhov kinetic model to simulate a flow through a long tube of circular cross section. It has been found that the values of
are less sensitive to the variation of
than of
. Thus, the tangential momentum accommodation coefficient
has been extracted from the measurements of
, given in [
29] for various gases in a glass capillary, assuming that the normal energy accommodation coefficient,
, is equal to 1. In this way, a good agreement has been obtained between the measured and simulated values of
for helium, neon, argon and xenon. However, in the framework of the Cercignani-Lampis model of boundary conditions, reliable values of the normal energy accommodation coefficient
are rare. A standard procedure used up to now consists of fixing the value of
and then in fitting the experimental data to obtain the value of
, as done in Ref. [
28]. In a recent paper [
30], the values of
, extracted from the literature of measurements of the acoustic resonance frequencies of helium-filled and argon-filled spherical metal cavities, have been reported. The Shakhov kinetic model with the Cercignani-Lampis boundary conditions has been solved in order to reproduce the temperature jump coefficient determined in these experiments. The numerical results have revealed that a continuous set of values of
and
can lead to the same jump coefficient. Therefore, to be able to uniquely estimate
, one should use additional information about
, exploiting other methods of measurement different from the acoustic resonance. As a consequence, the authors of [
30] have reported the values of
and
for helium and argon determined in diverse experimental settings. In the above cited works, the correlation between the measurements and the theoretical results has been analyzed in a narrow range of the rarefaction parameter (typically the near-continuum regime or the free-molecular flow limit where analytical formulas can be derived for the particular problem at hand).
Recently, in Ref. [
31], the thermal-creep problem of a rarefied gas between two parallel plates has been investigated by using a variational approach that applies to the integrodifferential form of the linearized Boltzmann equation for hard-sphere molecules. In the frame of the Cercignani-Lampis boundary conditions, new analytical expressions for the first- and second-order thermal slip coefficients have been derived in terms of the tangential momentum
and the normal energy
accommodation coefficients. These theoretical results have been compared with the thermal slip parameters experimentally measured by the authors of Ref. [
32]. For five noble gases, the values of
and
have been extracted and then used to evaluate the temperature-driven mass flow rates. A good agreement has been obtained between the variational outputs and the experimental data. However, as already underlined in [
30], for some specific values of the thermal-slip coefficients, there can exist multiple solutions for the accommodation coefficients.
The main objective of this work is to extend the previous findings reported in [
31] and to propose a methodology to uniquely determine
and
.
2. The Variational Approach to Plane Poiseuille and Thermal-Creep Problems
Let us consider two infinite parallel plates separated by a distance
d and a gas flowing between them, in the
z-direction, owing to longitudinal gradients of pressure and temperature defined as follows:
with
p and
T being the local gas pressure and temperature, respectively. Both walls are fixed at
. If the pressure and temperature gradients are taken to be small, the Boltzmann equation can be linearized [
31]:
where
is the small perturbation on the basic equilibrium state,
is the molecular velocity vector expressed in units of
(with
R being the specific gas constant) and
is the linearized collision operator. In the following, we study the Poiseuille and thermal-creep flows on the basis of the linearized Boltzmann equation for hard-sphere molecules. This approach provides a better approximation of real-gas behavior than commonly used kinetic models, as the Bhatnagar-Gross-Krook (BGK) or the Shakhov (S) models. The Boltzmann Equation (
4) can be solved with appropriate boundary conditions imposed on the walls of the channel. Once the distribution function
h is evaluated, the bulk velocity of the gas
and the heat flux
can be calculated as
Hence, the mass
and heat
flow rates (per unit time through unit thickness) read
where
is the gas density. To apply the variational formulation, we shall rewrite Equation (
4) in the following symbolic form:
where
and
. The boundary conditions to be matched with Equation (
9) have the general expression
where
and
concern the reemitted and the impinging molecules on the boundaries, respectively, and the operator
K depends on the scattering kernel used. In this work, we consider the Cercignani-Lampis (CL) boundary conditions [
33] based on two different adjustable parameters:
, which is the accommodation coefficient of the tangential momentum (
) and
, which is the accommodation of the kinetic energy owing to the velocity normal to the bounding walls (
). This model provides a more realistic physical description of the gas-surface interaction, compared to the most popular Maxwell diffuse-specular scattering kernel with only one adjustable parameter. The CL boundary conditions take the form:
where
with
being the two-dimensional vector of the tangential molecular velocity and
being the modified Bessel function of first kind and zeroth order. Let us now introduce the following functional
J of the test function
[
34,
35]:
where
P is the parity operator in velocity space, defined by
, while
,
denote two scalar products:
In the one-dimensional case, the integration over the boundary reduces to the sum of the terms at .
Using the variational principle described in Refs. [
34,
35], one can prove that the functional
attains its stationary (minimum) value when
solves Equation (
9) with the boundary conditions (
10). If we let
, Equation (
13) reduces to:
Thus, the stationary value of
J has a direct connection with the quantities of physical interest. For linearized problems, the mass and heat flow rates, per unit width, can be written as the sum of the Poiseuille and thermal-creep contributions:
where
,
,
and
are positive dimensionless coefficients that represent the Poiseuille coefficient, the thermal-creep coefficient, the mechanocaloric coefficient and the reduced heat flux, respectively. One can prove that the cross coefficients,
and
, satisfy the Onsager relation [
36,
37,
38]:
Following the general method presented in [
39] we derived an accurate expression for the trial function
by considering the solution of the BGK-Boltzmann equation in integral form for the coupled Poiseuille and thermal-creep problems. In this formula, the bulk velocity profile has been approximated by
with the adjustable constants
A and
C being represented as:
due to the linear superposition of the Poiseuille and thermal-creep effects. Since the solution of the BGK-Boltzmann equation, valid for all rarefaction regimes, contains exponential functions (describing the Knudsen layers) which cannot be easily manipulated in an analytical way within the framework of the true linearized collision operator, the following simplified test function has been used to evaluate Equation (
13):
In Equation (
22),
A,
B and
C are adjustable constants to be varied in order to obtain the best value of
, and
is a length parameter that will be specified in the following. Due to the simplifications carried out in deriving Equation (
22), the range of validity of the variational results extends into the transitional and near-continuum flow regimes. The trial function (
22) shows the same dependence on
x and
as the asymptotic form of the test function derived in [
36] via the use of the Chapman-Enskog procedure. Let us now rescale the constant
A appearing in Equation (
22) as follows:
, and define the rarefaction parameter (inverse Knudsen number):
For molecules approximated by hard spheres of diameter
, the length parameter
is given by
, where
n is the gas number density. Substituting
, given by Equation (
22), in Equation (
13) and splitting the constants as in Equation (
21), with the normalization
the functional
reduces to the sum of three functionals:
, simply grouping together the terms proportional to
,
and
, respectively. Each functional is a polynomial of the second order with respect to the constants
,
,
B,
and
, that are to be determined:
The nondimensional coefficients appearing in Equations (
25)–(
27) have been explicitly reported in [
31]. The derivatives of
,
, and
, with respect to
,
,
B,
and
vanish in correspondence of the optimal values of these constants [
31].
Since the functional
J can be split into three parts and the relations (
16)–(
18) hold, it is easy to see that the computation of the minimum of
,
and
will lead to an accurate estimate of the Poiseuille coefficient
, the thermal-creep coefficient
, and the reduced heat flux
:
3. Derivation of the Slip Coefficients and the Thermal Molecular Pressure Exponent
Over the last decades, the application of the Boltzmann equation to describe flows in nano- and microfluidic devices has become an area of intense research. Unfortunately, when applied to realistic multidimensional problems, the numerical solution of the kinetic equations is computationally demanding. However, in the case of low rarefaction level, the gas flow can be still simulated in the frame of the classical hydrodynamic (Navier–Stokes) equations, provided that slip boundary conditions are employed. These conditions involve slip parameters which depend on the gas-surface interaction potential through the accommodation coefficients. In particular, in the frame of the Cercignani-Lampis boundary conditions, and describe the tangential momentum and normal energy exchange at the solid-gas interfaces, respectively. This heat and momentum transfer highly affects the thermo-physical properties of a gas. Therefore, to improve our understanding of the gas-surface interaction to be used in practical applications, it is useful to derive a general method for extracting the accommodation coefficients, regardless of the driving mechanism of the fluid flow.
For pressure-driven flows, assuming a first-order boundary condition at a flat wall, in the isothermal case, the slip velocity reads as
where
is the viscous-slip coefficient,
is the mean free path of the molecules and the gas-velocity gradient is evaluated at the wall. Likewise, for thermal-driven flows, one can write the following first-order slip boundary condition on a flat wall:
where
is the thermal slip coefficient,
is the gas viscosity, and the temperature gradient is evaluated at the wall. The asymptotic near-continuum solutions of the Boltzmann equation for the Poiseuille and thermal-creep flows allow one to indirectly compute both the viscous and thermal slip coefficients, respectively. Equations (
28) and (
29) give in the limit
:
where
and
with
,
,
,
,
and
. The definition of the integral expressions
is reported in the
Appendix A. The reliability of a “second-order” solution for the pressure- and temperature-driven mass flow rate (Equations (
33) and (
34)) has been well assessed in Refs. [
31,
40,
41].
If one compares the thermal-driven mass flow rate obtained by using the Navier–Stokes equations with the slip boundary conditions (
32) and the variational formula (
34), it is straightforward to identify
with the first-order thermal slip coefficient
, while
can be referred to as the “second-order” thermal slip coefficient (where we indicate with “second-order” a term of the next-order with respect to the leading one). Likewise, this identification can be performed for the Poiseuille flow (a complete derivation is presented in Refs. [
40,
41]). Furthermore, the formulas (
33) and (
34) can be used to theoretically calculate the
-exponent. Assuming that the pressure and temperature drops are small, one can integrate Equation (
17) along the longitudinal direction
z to obtain:
4. Experimental Measurements
The measurements of the thermal molecular pressure difference and the temperature driven mass flow rates have been made by various authors and some of these works have been cited in
Section 1. The authors of Ref. [
29] provided a set of data on the TPD and also on the TPE. They found that the
-exponent can vary with the gas nature and the gas rarefaction, from 0 in the hydrodynamic flow regime to
in the free molecular one. Recently, a series of measurements of the temperature driven flows have been carried out [
42,
43,
44] in the capillary glass tube with radius of
for three temperature differences, 37 °C, 53.5 °C and 71 °C, keeping the cold temperature around 27 °C. The TPD, TPR and
values are provided for helium, argon and nitrogen.
The authors of Refs. [
32,
45] measured the different characteristics of the temperature driven mass flow rate through a microchannel over a wide range of the gas rarefaction parameter using the same experimental apparatus. A microchannel made of PEEK (PolyEtherEtherKetone) has been employed with a rectangular cross-section and the following dimensions: a height of
, a width of
, and a length of
. The temperature of the hot reservoir
and that of the cold reservoir
were maintained constant and two temperature differences
have been tested: (1)
,
, where
and (2)
,
, where
. Such temperature differences were chosen to have the same mean temperature
. The final equilibrium flow characteristics, as the thermal molecular pressure difference, the thermal molecular pressure ratio and the thermal molecular pressure exponent, were evaluated as functions of the rarefaction parameter from the measurements of pressure variations in time in both hot and cold reservoirs. The thermal molecular pressure difference has been measured for 5 noble gases (helium, neon, argon, krypton and xenon) and for polyatomic nitrogen.
The measurements of the thermal-creep mass flow rates have been reported in Ref. [
32]. In this case, only the second term on the right-hand side of Equation (
17) has been taken into account, modified as follows in order to consider a rectangular channel of width
w:
The lateral-wall effects have been neglected owing to the large channel width-to-height ratio equal to
[
46,
47]. Thus, the dimensionless thermal-creep coefficient
for a gas flowing between two parallel infinite plates at a distance
d apart can be used. In Equation (
47),
depends on the local rarefaction parameter
. Indeed, in the experiments, the variation of
along the channel is small enough to approximate
by
, where the mean rarefaction parameter
is calculated on the basis of the mean temperature
:
The viscosity coefficient is computed using the following relation [
48]:
where
is the viscosity coefficient at the temperature
and
is the viscosity index.
The experimental values for
as a function of
have been listed in Ref. [
32] (Table 1), for different noble gases. To extract the first- and second-order slip coefficients from the experiments and mostly to improve the accuracy in evaluating the first order coefficient, Equation (
47) has been used with
given by its asymptotic expression (
34):
In Equation (
50), we renamed the two coefficients
and
, appearing in (
34), with
and
to highlight that the latter are experimentally-determined coefficients. Integrating the resulting expression along the channel (by using the property of mass conservation) with
given by (
49) and
substituted by its mean value
(
48), one obtains:
where
reads
Since the constant
in Equation (
51) has been found to be quite close to unity, one can fit the measured data on the mass flow rate with the formula:
The fitting procedure has been carried out in the range of
, since the asymptotic formula (
51) allows one to predict the mass flow rate also in the early transition regime. The validity of this interval has been already assessed in [
31], on the basis of theoretical computations. The values of
and
are listed in Ref. [
32] (Table 3), for both
and
, and for five different noble gases: helium (He), neon (Ne), argon (Ar), krypton (Kr) and xenon (Xe). In Ref. [
45] the information on the
-exponent (Equation (
2)) is obtained from the steady state flow condition, i.e., when the thermal creep flow in the channel is counterbalanced by the Poiseuille flow generated by a pressure difference between the tanks. Therefore, this quantity is influenced not only by the temperature driven flow but also by the pressure driven one. It is worthwhile to note that experimentally-obtained values of
are essentially lower than
.
5. Results and Discussion
The present investigation is mostly guided by the desire to analyze recent experimental studies, described in detail in
Section 4, in order to propose a reliable procedure of extraction for the tangential momentum and normal energy accommodation coefficients. In Ref. [
32] the thermal slip coefficients
and
have been obtained applying a fitting procedure to mass flow rate measurements. In
Table 1, we listed the experimental estimates of
and
for each
K and
K, and also the experimental estimates using the data for the two temperature differences (indicated by ‘All’).
In the previous paper [
31], relying on a numerical solution of the system (
41) and (
42), where on the left-hand side we used values of
and
as close as possible to the experimental measurements, we extracted a pair of accommodation coefficients
,
, for each noble gas considered in the experiments: helium, neon, argon, krypton and xenon. Although the system (
41) and (
42) is highly nonlinear in the unknowns
and
, we numerically found only one solution for each fixed
and
. Indeed, a recent deeper inspection, carried out analytically by means of symbolic tools, has revealed that for some specific values of the thermal-slip coefficients, there can exist multiple solutions for the accommodation coefficients. This means that, we can derive the same values of
and
, with
and
ranging within a continuous interval and obtain equally accurate temperature-driven mass flow rates. Therefore, if one relies only on the experimental data presented in [
32], there is no way to uniquely determine
and
.
To overcome this difficulty, we took into account a further series of measurements, carried out with the same experimental apparatus of Ref. [
32], where the thermal molecular pressure exponent
has been evaluated [
45]. Since we verified that
mostly depends on the accommodation coefficient of the tangential momentum, the parameter
has been fixed first by comparing our variational results based on Equations (
33), (
34) and (
46), with the experimental data of
(reported in [
45]). Then
has been chosen accordingly in order to obtain thermal slip coefficients as close as possible to the experimental measurements (reported in [
32]). We have listed in
Table 2 these variational-determined thermal slip coefficients,
and
, along with the specific values of
and
extracted in order to optimize the agreement between the theoretical results and the measurements performed in both experiments [
32,
45]. The comparison between the variational calculations (formulas (
33), (
34) and (
46)) and the experimental data showing the dimensionless thermal-creep mass flow rate
and the
-exponent is drawn in
Figure 1,
Figure 2,
Figure 3,
Figure 4,
Figure 5,
Figure 6,
Figure 7,
Figure 8,
Figure 9 and
Figure 10.
In these pictures, we reported only the results of the experiments performed with a temperature difference between the hot and cold reservoir equal to
K. The agreement with the measurements obtained when
K is fairly good for most of the gases used in the experiments. However, there are some cases (as for xenon) where the experimental data for
K are more scattered, and this produces a discrepancy between the measured quantities (see, for instance, the value of
for xenon in
Table 1) and finally less good agreement with modeling. Indeed, the measured pressure variation, induced by the thermal creep flow, is smaller for heavier gas species (like xenon) and for small temperature differences, leading to a relatively larger measurement error.
Comparing the values of the first- and second-order thermal slip coefficients reported in
Table 2 of the present paper with those listed in Table II of Ref. [
31], one can immediately recognize that these coefficients have remained unchanged for four gases (helium, neon, argon, krypton). However, still the associated accommodation coefficients (
,
) are different, since in Ref. [
31] the authors have compared the variational results with a set of experimental data related only to the thermal-creep mass flow rate
, while in the present paper the agreement with the measured thermal molecular pressure exponent
is also evaluated. Owing to the existence of multiple pairs of accommodation coefficients (
,
), solutions of the system (
41) and (
42), we were able to leave unchanged
and
, which have already given rise to a good agreement between experimental and theoretical results for
[
31], and we chose the most appropriate accommodation coefficients in order to reproduce also the measured values of
. This procedure has been proven to be effective for all gases except xenon. The problem with xenon is that the experimental data for
can only be accurately reproduced (in both cases when
K and
K) if
, while a so strongly negative second-order thermal slip coefficient, as measured in the experiments with a temperature difference
K, is compatible only with
. Therefore, unlike what has been done in [
31], in this work we took into account only the experiments with
K (which provide less scattered data) and accordingly, for xenon, we reported in
Table 2 the variational-determined values of
and
which better reproduce only this kind of measurements.
For the comparison between the theoretical and experimental results shown in
Figure 1,
Figure 2,
Figure 3,
Figure 4,
Figure 5,
Figure 6,
Figure 7,
Figure 8,
Figure 9 and
Figure 10, we adopted the conventional approach by defining a mean free path through the classical hard sphere model, [
49,
50]:
To derive Equation (
54) it has been assumed that
while the real gas coefficient of viscosity
is proportional to
. A way to overcome this difficulty is to use Equation (
54) along with the definition (
49) for the coefficient of viscosity. An alternative route to define a consistent mean free path has been proposed a long time ago by Bird [
48], who introduced the variable cross-section hard sphere (VHS) model. This model properly accounts for the real gas temperature exponent of the coefficient of viscosity. Indeed, our variational results have been obtained for a hard-sphere gas, therefore we use Equation (
54) also to represent the experimental data. Accordingly, the rarefaction parameter
appearing in
Figure 1,
Figure 2,
Figure 3,
Figure 4,
Figure 5,
Figure 6,
Figure 7,
Figure 8,
Figure 9 and
Figure 10 reads:
where the viscosity
is given by Equation (
49), so the values of
reported in Equations (
48) and (
55) coincide. In
Figure 1,
Figure 2,
Figure 3,
Figure 4,
Figure 5,
Figure 6,
Figure 7,
Figure 8,
Figure 9 and
Figure 10, the interval of variation for the rarefaction parameter is different for each gas since in the experiments the pressure range has been taken to be the same, while the viscosity and the most probable velocity of each species are different.
6. Concluding Remarks
In the present study, a variational technique applied to the Boltzmann equation for hard-sphere molecules has been used to derive analytical expressions for the first- and second-order thermal slip coefficients in terms of the tangential momentum and the normal energy accommodation coefficients, defined in the frame of the Cercignani-Lampis model of boundary conditions. A new method for extracting the accommodation coefficients has been proposed by comparing the theoretical results with two series of measurements carried out with the same experimental apparatus, where the channel surfaces are made of PEEK [
32,
45]. Since the thermal molecular pressure exponent mainly depends on
, we fixed the tangential momentum accommodation coefficient by requiring a fair agreement with the experimental measurement of
, given in [
45]. Then, among the multiple pairs of variational solutions for (
,
), leading to the same first- and second-order thermal slip coefficients, chosen to closely approximate the experimental data reported in [
32], we selected the unique pair with the previously determined value of
. The mathematical constraint that both thermal creep and Poiseuille flows are needed to fully derive in a consistent way the parameters (
,
) has a physical counterpart, in that these problems are strongly related to each other: when a temperature gradient exists along the channel walls, then a thermal transpiration flow is induced from the cold side towards the hot side of the channel and this produces a pressure-driven backflow. In addition, since the analytical formulas derived from our variational method are valid for
and the data are provided for
, the fitting procedure between the theoretical and experimental results has been carried out in a wide range of the rarefaction parameter. The values of the accommodation coefficients (
,
) extracted in our work are consistent with those recently reported in [
30] for argon, while a significant deviation (especially related to the value of
) is highlighted for helium. Indeed, by analyzing the data reported in [
32,
45] it is not possible to detect a significant discrepancy in the measured quantities for the different gases (in particular, about the first- and second-order thermal slip coefficients) such as to justify a remarkable difference in the values of the accommodation coefficients between the helium and the other gases. Since the accommodation coefficients strongly depend on the properties of both the gas and the solid surface on which a molecule impinges, part of our future research should focus on extending the variational method in order to take into account interaction potentials more realistic than the hard-sphere model. In fact, if one considers, for instance, the viscosity index
, gases like argon, krypton and xenon show significant deviations from a hard-sphere gas behaviour. On the other hand, new experimental measurements are desirable to inspect more deeply the influence of the walls material of the microchannel, also allowing for a more straightforward comparison with the data available in the literature.