scholarly journals Constitutive modeling of an electro-magneto-rheological fluid: A continuum mechanics approach

Author(s):  
Deepak Kumar ◽  
Somnath Sarangi

Abstract The present article deals with a continuum mechanics-based method to model an electro-magneto-rheological (EMR) fluid deformation under an electromagnetic field. The proposed method follows the fundamental laws of physics, including the principles of thermodynamics. We start with the general balance laws for mass, linear momentum, angular momentum, energy, and the second law of thermodynamics in the form of Clausius-Duhem inequality with Maxwell’s equations. Then, we derive the generalized constitutive relation for EMR fluids following the representation theorem. To validate of the same, the developed constitutive relation is applied to an electro-rheological fluid valve system. The analytical predictions of the considered system are consistent with the experimentation. At last, we simulate different velocity profiles from the developed constitutive relation in the case of the parallel plate configuration. As a result, we succeed in providing more physics-based analytical findings than the existing studies in the literature.

2002 ◽  
Vol 12 (05) ◽  
pp. 721-736 ◽  
Author(s):  
ALFREDO MARZOCCHI ◽  
ALESSANDRO MUSESTI

Balance laws of the type of entropy are treated in the framework of geometric measure theory, and a weak version, although conceptually simple, of the Second Law of Thermodynamics is introduced, allowing extensions to measure-valued entropy productions and to sets of finite perimeter as subbodies.


2016 ◽  
Vol 39 (6) ◽  
pp. 734-749 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Ostoja-Starzewski ◽  
Bharath Venkatesh Raghavan

Author(s):  
A. M. Savchenko ◽  
Yu. V. Konovalov ◽  
A. V. Laushkin

The relationship of the first and second laws of thermodynamics based on their energy nature is considered. It is noted that the processes described by the second law of thermodynamics often take place hidden within the system, which makes it difficult to detect them. Nevertheless, even with ideal mixing, an increase in the internal energy of the system occurs, numerically equal to an increase in free energy. The largest contribution to the change in the value of free energy is made by the entropy of mixing, which has energy significance. The entropy of mixing can do the job, which is confirmed in particular by osmotic processes.


Author(s):  
Olivier Darrigol

This chapter recounts how Boltzmann reacted to Hermann Helmholtz’s analogy between thermodynamic systems and a special kind of mechanical system (the “monocyclic systems”) by grouping all attempts to relate thermodynamics to mechanics, including the kinetic-molecular analogy, into a family of partial analogies all derivable from what we would now call a microcanonical ensemble. At that time, Boltzmann regarded ensemble-based statistical mechanics as the royal road to the laws of thermal equilibrium (as we now do). In the same period, he returned to the Boltzmann equation and the H theorem in reply to Peter Guthrie Tait’s attack on the equipartition theorem. He also made a non-technical survey of the second law of thermodynamics seen as a law of probability increase.


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