Lattice-Boltzmann simulation for pressure driven microscale gas flows in transition regime

2015 ◽  
Vol 26 (04) ◽  
pp. 1550037 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiang-Ji Yue ◽  
Ze-Huan Wu ◽  
Yao-Shuai Ba ◽  
Yan-Jun Lu ◽  
Zhi-Peng Zhu ◽  
...  

This paper carries out numerical simulation for pressure driven microscale gas flows in transition flow regime. The relaxation time of LBM model was modified with the application of near wall effective mean free path combined with a combination of Bounce-back and Specular Reflection (BSR) boundary condition. The results in this paper are more close to those of DSCM and IP-DSCM compared with the results obtained by other LBM models. The calculation results show that in transition regime, with the increase of Knudsen number, the dimensionless slip velocity at the wall significantly increases, but the maximum linear deviation of nonlinear pressure distribution gradually decreases.

Author(s):  
Weizhong Li ◽  
Wenning Zhou

This paper studies the roughness effect of the two-dimensional micro Poiseuille gas flows in a curved channel by a modified lattice Boltzmann model. A method relating to the Knudsen number (Kn) with the relaxation time is discussed. In addition, to capture the slip velocity on a solid boundary more accurately, a combined boundary scheme (CBC), which combines the no-slip bounce-back and the free-slip specular reflection schemes, is applied to boundary condition treatment. The rough wall of the micro-channel is described by uniformly distributed rectangular or triangular rough elements. The simulation results show that the roughness and the geometries of the channel have great effects not only on velocity distribution but also on pressure distribution.


Entropy ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 41
Author(s):  
Qing Liu ◽  
Xiang-Bo Feng

In this article, a lattice Boltzmann (LB) method for studying microchannel gas flows is developed in the framework of the cascaded collision operator. In the cascaded lattice Boltzmann (CLB) method, the Bosanquet-type effective viscosity is employed to capture the rarefaction effects, and the combined bounce-back/specular-reflection scheme together with the modified second-order slip boundary condition is adopted so as to match the Bosanquet-type effective viscosity. Numerical simulations of microchannel gas flow with periodic and pressure boundary conditions in the transition flow regime are carried out to validate the CLB method. The predicted results agree well with the analytical, numerical, and experimental data reported in the literature.


Author(s):  
Mohammad Normohammadzadeh ◽  
Mohammad Rahnama ◽  
Saeed Jafari ◽  
Alireza Akhgar

Microscale flow simulation is considered in this paper for a microchannel flow geometry. Lattice Boltzmann Model (LBM) was used as the numerical method for flow simulation, in which an effective mean free path was used in relaxation time appeared in LBM. The effective mean-free-path makes it possible to investigate flow characteristics in transition flow regime, for which Knudsen number varies from 0.1 to 10. Such implementation does not change the computational efficiency of LBM significantly. Results are obtained for flow configuration in a long microchannel. The slip velocity was predicted in this flow configuration with good accuracy. Good correspondence with Direct Simulation Monte Carlo (DSMC) method was observed.


Author(s):  
Z. X. Sun ◽  
Y. L. He ◽  
W. Q. Tao

Different opinions still exist on some basic principles of DSMC method, such as the proper grid dimension and the proper number of particles in a cell. In this paper DSMC simulation of Poiseuille flow is made to evaluate the dependence of simulation results on cell dimension and number of particles per cell. In the simulation process a self adapting block structured grid system is employed to make sure that the number of particles per cell is constant. The simulation covers both slip flow regime and transition flow regime and each regime covers both high pressure and low pressure. Our simulation results indicate that the number of particles per cell and scaling factor exert little influence on simulation result for both slip flow and transition flow when the number of particles per cell surpasses 5, but the dimension of cell influences the accuracy of result obviously. The error caused by cell dimension decreases as the diminish of cell dimension. It is concluded that in the DSMC method it is necessary to make sure that the cell is less than 1/2 of molecular mean free path.


Dispersion of matter in two tubes of diameter 0.684 and 2.77 cm and length 24 m (80 ft) was studied in three gaseous systems, namely, N 2 :C 2 H 4 , N 2 :A, N 2 :He. The Reynolds number variation was 2 x 10 2 to 10 4 . The results were compared with the theory due to Sir Geoffrey Taylor which was up dated by inclusion of an accurate velocity profile. Particular attention was paid to the transition flow regime in which intermittency parameters were measured. It is shown that the theory is adequate beyond the transition regime, but the interpretation of results cannot be quantitatively satisfactory because of lack of precise data on turbulent transfer of matter. Dispersion in the transition regime is influenced by turbulent slugs but experimental results are surprisingly close to predictions from the turbulent flow theory. The position of the maximum of the dispersion parameter was measured and its dependence on the length to diameter ratio of the tubes, and the Schmidt and Reynolds numbers of the system is explained. The reasons for asymmetric response curves for transitional flow lies in the retention of tracer in the recirculating regions set up between adjacent laminar regions and turbulent slugs.


Author(s):  
P. Lopez ◽  
Y. Bayazitoglu

Lattice Boltzmann (LB) method models have been demonstrated to provide an accurate representation of the flow characteristics in rarefied flows. Conditions in such flows are characterized by the Knudsen number (Kn), defined as the ratio between the gas molecular Mean Free Path ( MFP, λ) and the device characteristic length (L). As the Knudsen number increases, the behavior of the flow near the walls is increasingly dominated by interactions between the gas molecules and the solid surface. Due to this, linear constitutive relations for shear stress and heat flux, which are assumed in the Navier-Stokes-Fourier (NSF) system of equations, are not valid within the Knudsen Layer (KL). Fig. 1 illustrates the characteristics of the velocity field within the Knudsen layer in a shear-driven flow. It is easily observed that although the NSF equations with slip flow boundary conditions (represented by dashed line) can predict the velocity profile in the bulk flow region, they fail to capture the flow characteristics inside the Knudsen layer. Slip flow boundary conditions have also been derived using the integral transform technique [1]. Various methods have been explored to extend the applicability of LB models to higher Knudsen number flows, including using higher order velocity sets, and using wall-distance functions to capture the effect of the walls on the mean free path by incorporating such functions on the determination of the local relaxation parameters. In this study, a high order velocity model which contains a two-dimensional, thirteen velocity direction set (e.g., D2Q13), as shown in Fig. 2, is used as the basis of the current LB model. The LB model consists of two independent distribution functions to simulate the density and temperature fields, while the Diffuse Scattering Boundary Condition (DSBC) method is used to simulate the fluid interaction with the walls. To further improve the characterization of transition flow conditions expected in nano-scale heat transfer, we explored the implementation of two wall-distance functions, derived recently based on an integrated form of a probability distribution function, to the high-order LB model. These functions are used to determine the effective mean free path values throughout the height of the micro/nano-channel, and the resulting effect is first normalized and then used to determine local relaxation times for both momentum and energy using a relationship based on the local Knudsen number. The two wall-distance functions are based on integral forms of 1) the classical probability distribution function, ψ(r) = λ0−1e−r/λ0, derived by Arlemark et al [2], in which λ0represents the reference gas mean free path, and 2) a Power-Law probability distribution function, derived by Dongari et al [3]. Thus, the probability that a molecule travels a distance between r and r+dr between two successive collisions is equal to ψ(r)dr. The general form of the integral of the two functions used can be described by ψ(r) = C − f(r), where f(r) represents the base function (exponential or Power Law), and C is set to 1 so that the probability that a molecule will travel a distance r+dr without a collision ranges from zero to 1. The performance of the present LB model coupled with the implementation of the two wall-distance functions is tested using two classical flow cases. The first case considered is that of isothermal, shear-driven Couette flow between two parallel, horizontal plates separated by a distance H, moving in opposite directions at a speed of U0. Fig. 3 shows the normalized velocity profiles across the micro-channel height for various Knudsen numbers in the transition flow regime based on our LB models as compared to data based on the Linearized Boltzmann equation [4]. The results show that our two LB models provide results that are in excellent agreement with the reference data up to the high end of the transition flow regime, with Knudsen numbers greater than 1. The second case is rarefied Fourier flow within horizontal, parallel plates, with the plates being stationary and set to a constant temperature (TTop > TBottom), and the Prandtl number is set to 0.67 to match the reference data based on the Direct Simulation Monte Carlo (DSMC) method [5]. Fig. 4 shows the normalized temperature profiles across the microchannel height for various Knudsen numbers in the slip/transition How regime. For the entire Knudsen number range studied, our two LB models provide temperature profiles that are in excellent agreement with the non-linear profile seen in the reference data. The results obtained show that the effective MFP relationship based on the exponential function improves the results obtained with the high order LB model for both shear-driven and Fourier flows up to Kn∼1. The results also show that the effective MFP relationship based on the Power Law distribution function greatly enhances the results obtained with the high order LB model for the two cases addressed, up to Kn∼3. In conclusion, the resulting LB models represent an effective tool in modeling non-equilibrium gas flows expected within micro/nano-scale devices.


Author(s):  
Weilin Yang ◽  
Hongxia Li ◽  
TieJun Zhang ◽  
Ibrahim M. Elfadel

Rarefied gas flow plays an important role in the design and performance analysis of micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMS) under high-vacuum conditions. The rarefaction can be evaluated by the Knudsen number (Kn), which is the ratio of the molecular mean free path length and the characteristic length. In micro systems, the rarefied gas flow usually stays in the slip- and transition-flow regions (10−3 < Kn < 10), and may even go into the free molecular flow region (Kn > 10). As a result, conventional design tools based on continuum Navier-Stokes equation solvers are not applicable to analyzing rarefaction phenomena in MEMS under vacuum conditions. In this paper, we investigate the rarefied gas flow by using the lattice Boltzmann method (LBM), which is suitable for mesoscopic fluid simulation. The gas pressure determines the mean free path length and Kn, which further influences the relaxation time in the collision procedure of LBM. Here, we focus on the problem of squeezed film damping caused by an oscillating rigid object in a cavity. We propose an improved LBM with an immersed boundary approach, where an adjustable force term is used to quantify the interaction between the moving object and adjacent fluid, and further determines the slip velocity. With the proposed approach, the rarefied gas flow in MEMS with squeezed film damping is characterized. Different factors that affect the damping coefficient, such as pressure of gas and frequency of oscillation, are investigated in our simulation studies.


Author(s):  
Nicolas G. Hadjiconstantinou

We discuss and validate a recently proposed second-order slip model for dilute gas flows. Our discussion focuses on the importance of quantitatively accounting for the effect of Knudsen layers close to the walls. This is important, not only for obtaining an accurate slip model but also for interpreting the results of the latter since in transition-regime flows the Knudsen layers penetrate large parts of the flow. Our extensive validation illustrates the above points by comparing direct Monte Carlo solutions to the slip model predictions for an unsteady flow. Excellent agreement is found between simulation and the slip model predictions up to Kn = 0.4, for both the velocity profile and stress at the wall. This demonstrates that the proposed second-order slip model reliably describes arbitrary flowfields (and related stress fields) in a predictive manner at least up to Kn = 0.4 for both steady and transient problems.


Vacuum ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 160 ◽  
pp. 114-122 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giorgos Tatsios ◽  
Dimitris Valougeorgis ◽  
Stefan K. Stefanov

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