Abstract
The Chapman–Enskog expansion is generalized in
order to derive constitutive relations
for flows of inelastically colliding spheres in three dimensions –
to Burnett
order. To this end, the pertinent (nonlinear) Boltzmann equation is perturbatively
solved by performing a (double) expansion in the Knudsen number and the
degree
of inelasticity. One of the results is that the normal stress differences
and the ‘temperature
anisotropy’, characterizing granular fluids, are Burnett effects.
The constitutive
relations derived in this work differ, both qualitatively and quantitatively,
from those
obtained in previous studies. In particular, the Navier–Stokes (order)
terms have a
different dependence on the degree of inelasticity and the number density
than in
previously derived constitutive relations; for instance, the expression
for the heat
flux contains a term which is proportional to ε∇ log n,
where ε is a measure of the
degree of inelasticity and n denotes the number density. This
contribution to the
heat flux is of zeroth order in the density; a similar term, i.e.
one that is proportional to ε∇n, has been
previously obtained by using the Enskog correction but
this term is O(n) and it vanishes in the
Boltzmann limit. These discrepancies are
resolved by an analysis of the Chapman–Enskog and Grad expansions,
pertaining
to granular flows, which reveals that the quasi-microscopic rate of decay
of the temperature,
which has not been taken into account heretofore, provides an important
scale that affects the constitutive relations. Some (minor) quantitative
differences
between our results and previous ones exist as well. These are due to the
fact that
we take into account an isotropic correction to the leading Maxwellian
distribution,
which has not been considered before, and also because we consider the
full
dependence of the corrections to the Maxwellian distribution on the (fluctuating)
speed.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
301 articles.
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