Fluid Slip Flow With a Slip Boundary Condition in the Dugks

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenqiang Guo ◽  
Guoxiang Hou
2014 ◽  
Vol 136 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Anthony J. Gannon ◽  
Garth V. Hobson ◽  
Michael J. Shea ◽  
Christopher S. Clay ◽  
Knox T. Millsaps

This study forms part of a program to develop a micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMS) scale turbomachinery based vacuum pump and investigates the roughing portion of such a system. Such a machine would have many radial stages with the exhaust stages operating near atmospheric conditions while the inlet stages operate at near vacuum conditions. In low vacuum such as those to the inlet of a roughing pump, the flow can still be treated as a continuum; however, the no-slip boundary condition is not accurate. The Knudsen number becomes a dominant nondimensional parameter in these machines due to their small size and low pressures. As the Knudsen number increases, slip-flow becomes present at the walls. The study begins with a basic overview on implementing the slip wall boundary condition in a commercial code by specifying the wall shear stress based on the mean-free-path of the gas molecules. This is validated against an available micro-Poiseuille classical solution at Knudsen numbers between 0.001 and 0.1 with reasonable agreement found. The method of specifying the wall shear stress is then applied to a generic MEMS scale roughing pump stage that consists of two stators and a rotor operating at a nominal absolute pressure of 500 Pa. The zero flow case was simulated in all cases as the pump down time for these machines is small due to the small volume being evacuated. Initial transient two-dimensional (2D) simulations are used to evaluate three boundary conditions, classical no-slip, specified-shear, and slip-flow. It is found that the stage pressure rise increased as the flow began to slip at the walls. In addition, it was found that at lower pressures the pure slip boundary condition resulted in very similar predictions to the specified-shear simulations. As the specified-shear simulations are computationally expensive it is reasonable to use slip-flow boundary conditions. This approach was used to perform three-dimensional (3D) simulations of the stage. Again the stage pressure increased when slip-flow was present compared with the classical no-slip boundaries. A characteristic of MEMS scale turbomachinery are the large relative tip gaps requiring 3D simulations. A tip gap sensitivity study was performed and it was found that when no-slip boundaries were present the pressure ratio increased significantly with decreasing tip gap. When slip-flow boundaries were present, this relationship was far weaker.


Author(s):  
Pratanu Roy ◽  
N. K. Anand ◽  
Debjyoti Banerjee

Investigation of fluid flow and heat transfer in rotating microchannels is important for centrifugal microfluidics, which has emerged as an advanced technique in biomedical applications and chemical separations. The pseudo forces namely the centrifugal force and the Coriolis force arising as a consequence of the rotating reference frame change the flow pattern significantly from the parabolic profile in a non-rotating channel. The convective heat transfer process is also influenced by the secondary flow introduced by the rotational effect. Moreover, if the microchannel wall is hydrophobic, slip flow can occur inside the channel when the conventional no slip boundary condition is no longer valid. In this work, we have numerically investigated the flow and heat transfer inside a straight rotating rectangular microchannel in the slip flow regime. A pressure based finite volume technique in a staggered grid was applied to solve the steady incompressible Navier-Stokes and energy equations. It has been observed that, depending on the rotational velocity, different slip velocities are induced at the channel walls. The average fluid temperature increases with the increase of rotation as convective heat transfer mechanism is increased due to the secondary flow. However, the slip boundary condition has a negligible effect on the temperature profiles.


2009 ◽  
Vol 131 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Bahrami ◽  
A. Tamayol ◽  
P. Taheri

In the present study, a compact analytical model is developed to determine the pressure drop of fully-developed, incompressible, and constant properties slip-flow through arbitrary cross section microchannels. An averaged first-order Maxwell slip boundary condition is considered. Introducing a relative velocity, the difference between the bulk flow and the boundary velocities, the axial momentum reduces to Poisson’s equation with homogeneous boundary condition. Square root of area is selected as the characteristic length scale. The model of Bahrami et al. (2006, “Pressure Drop of Laminar, Fully Developed Flow in Microchannels of Arbitrary Cross Section,” ASME J. Fluids Eng., 128, pp. 1036–1044), which was developed for no-slip boundary condition, is extended to cover the slip-flow regime in this study. The proposed model for pressure drop is a function of geometrical parameters of the channel: cross sectional area, perimeter, polar moment of inertia, and the Knudsen number. The model is successfully validated against existing numerical and experimental data collected from different sources in literature for several shapes, including circular, rectangular, trapezoidal, and double-trapezoidal cross sections and a variety of gases such as nitrogen, argon, and helium.


2007 ◽  
Vol 18 (04) ◽  
pp. 693-700 ◽  
Author(s):  
XIN FU ◽  
BAOMING LI ◽  
JUNFENG ZHANG ◽  
FUZHI TIAN ◽  
DANIEL Y. KWOK

In traditional computational fluid dynamics, the effect of surface energetics on fluid flow is often ignored or translated into an arbitrary selected slip boundary condition in solving the Navier-Stokes equation. Using a bottom-up approach, we show in this paper that variation of surface energetics through intermolecular theory can be employed in a lattice Boltzmann method to investigate both slip and non-slip phenomena in microfluidics in conjunction with the description of electrokinetic phenomena for electrokinetic slip flow. Rather than using the conventional Navier-Stokes equation with a slip boundary condition, the description of electrokinetic slip flow in microfluidics is manifested by the more physical solid-liquid energy parameters, electrical double layer and contact angle in the mean-field description of the lattice Boltzmann method.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 44
Author(s):  
Chen Zhang ◽  
Xuming Wang ◽  
Jiaqi Jin ◽  
Lixia Li ◽  
Jan D. Miller

Most reported slip length measurements have been made at the surfaces of synthetic materials and modified synthetic materials. In contrast, few slip length measurements at the surface of unmodified natural mineral surfaces have been reported. In this regard, flow at the silica face surfaces of the phyllosilicate minerals, talc and mica, was considered. A slip boundary condition was expected at the nonpolar hydrophobic silica surface of talc leading to enhanced flow, and a no-slip boundary condition was expected at the hydrophilic silica surface of mica. Atomic force microscopy (AFM) slip length measurements were made at the talc and mica surfaces. The slip length results for the hydrophobic silica surface of talc were contrasted to the results for the hydrophilic silica surface of mica (no-slip flow). The results are discussed based on molecular dynamics simulations (MDS), as reported in the literature, and AFM images of surface nanobubbles. For nonpolar hydrophobic surfaces (such as talc), it is doubtful that the MDS interfacial water structure and the water exclusion zone (3.2 Å) account for the AFM slip flow with slip lengths as great as 95 nm. Rather, a better explanation for the AFM slip flow condition is based on reduced interfacial viscosity due to the presence of dissolved gas and the accommodation of pancake nanobubbles at the talc surface having a height dimension of magnitude similar to the slip length.


1965 ◽  
Vol 22 (3) ◽  
pp. 463-469 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. D. Murray

An asymptotic solution to the Navier-Stokes equation is obtained for the incompressible flow of a viscous fluid past a semi-infinite flat plate when a slip boundary condition is applied at the plate. The results for the shear stress (and hence the slip velocity) on the plate differ basically from those obtained by previous authors who considered the same problem using some form of the Oseen equations.


Author(s):  
A. Tamayol ◽  
M. Bahrami ◽  
P. Taheri

In the present study, a compact analytical model is developed to determine the pressure drop of fully-developed, incompressible, and constant properties slip-flow through arbitrary cross-section microchannels. An averaged first-order Maxwell slip boundary condition is considered. Introducing a relative velocity, the difference between the bulk flow and the boundary velocities, the axial momentum reduces to the Poisson’s equation with homogeneous boundary condition. Square root of area is selected as the characteristic length scale. Bahrami et al.’s model, which was developed no-slip boundary condition, is extended to cover the slip-flow regime in this study. The proposed model is a function of geometrical parameters of the channel: cross-sectional area, perimeter, polar moment of inertia and the Knudsen number. The model is successfully validated against existing numerical and experimental data from different sources in the literature for several shapes, including: circular, rectangular, trapezoidal, and double-trapezoidal cross-sections and a variety of gases such as: nitrogen, argon, and helium.


Author(s):  
Anthony J. Gannon ◽  
Garth V. Hobson ◽  
Michael J. Shea ◽  
Christopher S. Clay ◽  
Knox T. Millsaps

This study forms part of a program to develop a micro-electro-mechanical-systems (MEMS) scale turbomachinery based vacuum pump and investigates the roughing portion of such a system. Such a machine would have many radial stages with the exhaust stages operating near atmospheric conditions while the inlet stages operate at near vacuum conditions. In low vacuum such as those to the inlet of a roughing pump the flow can still be treated as a continuum however the no-slip boundary condition is not accurate. The Knudsen number becomes a dominant non-dimensional parameter in these machines due to their small size and low pressures. As the Knudsen number increases slip flow becomes present at the walls. The study begins with a basic overview on implementing the slip wall boundary condition in a commercial code by specifying the wall shear stress based on the mean-free-path of the gas molecules. This is validated against an available micro-Poiseuille classical solution at Knudsen numbers between 0.001–0.1 with reasonable agreement found. The method of specifying the wall-shear stress is then applied to a generic MEMS scale roughing pump stage that consists of two stators and a rotor operating at a nominal absolute pressure of 500 Pa. The zero flow case was simulated in all cases as the pump down time for these machines is small due to the small volume being evacuated. Initial transient two-dimensional simulations are used to evaluate three boundary conditions, classical no-slip, specified-shear and slip-flow. It is found that the stage pressure rise increased as the flow began to slip at the walls. In addition it was found that at lower pressures the pure slip boundary condition resulted in very similar predictions to the specified shear simulations. As the specified-shear simulations are computationally expensive it is reasonable to use slip-flow boundary conditions. This approach was used to perform three-dimensional simulations of the stage. Again the stage pressure increased when slip-flow was present compared with the classical no-slip boundaries. A characteristic of MEMS scale turbomachinery are the large relative tip gaps requiring three-dimensional simulations. A tip gap sensitivity study was performed and it was found that when no-slip boundaries were present the pressure ratio increased significantly with decreasing tip gap. When slip-flow boundaries were present this relationship was far weaker.


1971 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 659-664 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. L. Shah

The theory of the oscillating viscometer has been extended for a slip boundary condition. The cases considered here are: an infinite disk, an infinite cylinder, a sphere, and a pile of infinite disks. This study has prepared the way for the formulation of a new method for measuring the amount of slip experienced by bodies moving in gases outside the continuum regime. The theory of Kestin and Wang [11] has been extended to include slip at the boundary.


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