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Keywords = Grad’s moment method

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15 pages, 13916 KiB  
Article
Nonequilibrium Molecular Velocity Distribution Functions Predicted by Macroscopic Gas Dynamic Models
by Maksim Timokhin and Yevgeniy Bondar
Mathematics 2025, 13(8), 1328; https://doi.org/10.3390/math13081328 - 18 Apr 2025
Viewed by 354
Abstract
In the present study, abilities of various macroscopic models (Navier–Stokes–Fourier, Burnett, original and regularized Grad’s 13-moment equations) in predicting the nonequilibrium molecular velocity distribution are examined. The results of the local distribution function reconstruction from flow macroparameters for the models considered are compared [...] Read more.
In the present study, abilities of various macroscopic models (Navier–Stokes–Fourier, Burnett, original and regularized Grad’s 13-moment equations) in predicting the nonequilibrium molecular velocity distribution are examined. The results of the local distribution function reconstruction from flow macroparameters for the models considered are compared with each other and with the reference solution. Two different flows are considered: normal shock wave and stationary regular reflection of oblique shock waves. The Direct Simulation Monte Carlo method is used to obtain the reference solution and the flow macroparameters required for the distribution function reconstruction. All models under consideration predict the distribution function in the upstream low-density region rather poorly, with strong oscillations and unphysical negative values (especially regularized Grad’s 13-moment equations). In the high-density downstream region, the shape of the reference distribution is close to equilibrium, and all macroscopic models predict it rather accurately. Full article
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24 pages, 755 KiB  
Article
Exact Results for Non-Newtonian Transport Properties in Sheared Granular Suspensions: Inelastic Maxwell Models and BGK-Type Kinetic Model
by Rubén Gómez González and Vicente Garzó
Entropy 2024, 26(3), 265; https://doi.org/10.3390/e26030265 - 15 Mar 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1491
Abstract
The Boltzmann kinetic equation for dilute granular suspensions under simple (or uniform) shear flow (USF) is considered to determine the non-Newtonian transport properties of the system. In contrast to previous attempts based on a coarse-grained description, our suspension model accounts for the real [...] Read more.
The Boltzmann kinetic equation for dilute granular suspensions under simple (or uniform) shear flow (USF) is considered to determine the non-Newtonian transport properties of the system. In contrast to previous attempts based on a coarse-grained description, our suspension model accounts for the real collisions between grains and particles of the surrounding molecular gas. The latter is modeled as a bath (or thermostat) of elastic hard spheres at a given temperature. Two independent but complementary approaches are followed to reach exact expressions for the rheological properties. First, the Boltzmann equation for the so-called inelastic Maxwell models (IMM) is considered. The fact that the collision rate of IMM is independent of the relative velocity of the colliding spheres allows us to exactly compute the collisional moments of the Boltzmann operator without the knowledge of the distribution function. Thanks to this property, the transport properties of the sheared granular suspension can be exactly determined. As a second approach, a Bhatnagar–Gross–Krook (BGK)-type kinetic model adapted to granular suspensions is solved to compute the velocity moments and the velocity distribution function of the system. The theoretical results (which are given in terms of the coefficient of restitution, the reduced shear rate, the reduced background temperature, and the diameter and mass ratios) show, in general, a good agreement with the approximate analytical results derived for inelastic hard spheres (IHS) by means of Grad’s moment method and with computer simulations performed in the Brownian limiting case (m/mg, where mg and m are the masses of the particles of the molecular and granular gases, respectively). In addition, as expected, the IMM and BGK results show that the temperature and non-Newtonian viscosity exhibit an S shape in a plane of stress–strain rate (discontinuous shear thickening, DST). The DST effect becomes more pronounced as the mass ratio m/mg increases. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue 180th Anniversary of Ludwig Boltzmann)
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21 pages, 4437 KiB  
Article
Moment-to-Moment Continuous Attention Fluctuation Monitoring through Consumer-Grade EEG Device
by Shan Zhang, Zihan Yan, Shardul Sapkota, Shengdong Zhao and Wei Tsang Ooi
Sensors 2021, 21(10), 3419; https://doi.org/10.3390/s21103419 - 14 May 2021
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 6027
Abstract
While numerous studies have explored using various sensing techniques to measure attention states, moment-to-moment attention fluctuation measurement is unavailable. To bridge this gap, we applied a novel paradigm in psychology, the gradual-onset continuous performance task (gradCPT), to collect the ground truth of attention [...] Read more.
While numerous studies have explored using various sensing techniques to measure attention states, moment-to-moment attention fluctuation measurement is unavailable. To bridge this gap, we applied a novel paradigm in psychology, the gradual-onset continuous performance task (gradCPT), to collect the ground truth of attention states. GradCPT allows for the precise labeling of attention fluctuation on an 800 ms time scale. We then developed a new technique for measuring continuous attention fluctuation, based on a machine learning approach that uses the spectral properties of EEG signals as the main features. We demonstrated that, even using a consumer grade EEG device, the detection accuracy of moment-to-moment attention fluctuations was 73.49%. Next, we empirically validated our technique in a video learning scenario and found that our technique match with the classification obtained through thought probes, with an average F1 score of 0.77. Our results suggest the effectiveness of using gradCPT as a ground truth labeling method and the feasibility of using consumer-grade EEG devices for continuous attention fluctuation detection. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Wearables)
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19 pages, 4404 KiB  
Article
Entropy Conditions Involved in the Nonlinear Coupled Constitutive Method for Solving Continuum and Rarefied Gas Flows
by Ke Tang and Hong Xiao
Entropy 2017, 19(12), 683; https://doi.org/10.3390/e19120683 - 12 Dec 2017
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 4253
Abstract
The numerical study of continuum-rarefied gas flows is of considerable interest because it can provide fundamental knowledge regarding flow physics. Recently, the nonlinear coupled constitutive method (NCCM) has been derived from the Boltzmann equation and implemented to investigate continuum-rarefied gas flows. In this [...] Read more.
The numerical study of continuum-rarefied gas flows is of considerable interest because it can provide fundamental knowledge regarding flow physics. Recently, the nonlinear coupled constitutive method (NCCM) has been derived from the Boltzmann equation and implemented to investigate continuum-rarefied gas flows. In this study, we first report the important and detailed issues in the use of the H theorem and positive entropy generation in the NCCM. Importantly, the unified nonlinear dissipation model and its relationships to the Rayleigh–Onsager function were demonstrated in the treatment of the collision term of the Boltzmann equation. In addition, we compare the Grad moment method, the Burnett equation, and the NCCM. Next, differences between the NCCM equations and the Navier–Stokes equations are explained in detail. For validation, numerical studies of rarefied and continuum gas flows were conducted. These studies include rarefied and/or continuum gas flows around a two-dimensional (2D) cavity, a 2D airfoil, a 2D cylinder, and a three-dimensional space shuttle. It was observed that the present results of the NCCM are in good agreement with those of the Direct Simulation Monte Carlo (DSMC) method in rarefied cases and are in good agreement with those of the Navier–Stokes equations in continuum cases. Finally, this study can be regarded as a theoretical basis of the NCCM for the development of a unified framework for solving continuum-rarefied gas flows. Full article
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