Zero inertia limit of incompressible Qian–Sheng model

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-64
Author(s):  
Yi-Long Luo ◽  
Yangjun Ma

The Qian–Sheng model is a system describing the hydrodynamics of nematic liquid crystals in the Q-tensor framework. When the inertial effect is included, it is a hyperbolic-type system involving a second-order material derivative coupling with forced incompressible Navier–Stokes equations. If formally letting the inertial constant [Formula: see text] go to zero, the resulting system is the corresponding parabolic model. We provide the result on the rigorous justification of this limit in [Formula: see text] with small initial data, which validates mathematically the parabolic Qian–Sheng model. To achieve this, an initial layer is introduced to not only overcome the disparity of the initial conditions between the hyperbolic and parabolic models, but also make the convergence rate optimal. Moreover, a novel [Formula: see text]-dependent energy norm is carefully designed, which is non-negative only when [Formula: see text] is small enough, and handles the difficulty brought by the second-order material derivative.

Analysis ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 40 (3) ◽  
pp. 127-150
Author(s):  
Tania Biswas ◽  
Sheetal Dharmatti ◽  
Manil T. Mohan

AbstractIn this paper, we formulate a distributed optimal control problem related to the evolution of two isothermal, incompressible, immiscible fluids in a two-dimensional bounded domain. The distributed optimal control problem is framed as the minimization of a suitable cost functional subject to the controlled nonlocal Cahn–Hilliard–Navier–Stokes equations. We describe the first order necessary conditions of optimality via the Pontryagin minimum principle and prove second order necessary and sufficient conditions of optimality for the problem.


Volume 3 ◽  
2004 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erik D. Svensson

In this work we computationally characterize fluid mixing in a number of passive microfluidic mixers. Generally, in order to systematically study and characterize mixing in realistic fluid systems we (1) compute the fluid flow in the systems by solving the stationary three-dimensional Navier-Stokes equations or Stokes equations with a finite element method, and (2) compute various measures indicating the degree of mixing based on concepts from dynamical systems theory, i.e., the sensitive dependence on initial conditions and mixing variance.


2016 ◽  
pp. 92-97
Author(s):  
R. E. Volkov ◽  
A. G. Obukhov

The rectangular parallelepiped explicit difference schemes for the numerical solution of the complete built system of Navier-Stokes equations. These solutions describe the three-dimensional flow of a compressible viscous heat-conducting gas in a rising swirling flows, provided the forces of gravity and Coriolis. This assumes constancy of the coefficient of viscosity and thermal conductivity. The initial conditions are the features that are the exact analytical solution of the complete Navier-Stokes equations. Propose specific boundary conditions under which the upward flow of gas is modeled by blowing through the square hole in the upper surface of the computational domain. A variant of parallelization algorithm for calculating gas dynamic and energy characteristics. The results of calculations of gasdynamic parameters dependency on the speed of the vertical blowing by the time the flow of a steady state flow.


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