Mach Wave and Acoustical Wave Structure in Nonequilibrium Gas-Particle Flows
In this Element, the gas-particle flow problem is formulated with momentum and thermal slip that introduces two relaxation times. Starting from acoustical propagation in a medium in equilibrium, the relaxation-wave equation in airfoil coordinates is derived though a Galilean transformation for uniform flow. Steady planar small perturbation supersonic flow is studied in detail according to Whitham's higher-order waves. The signals owing to wall boundary conditions are damped along the frozen-Mach wave, and are both damped and diffusive along an effective-intermediate Mach wave and diffusive along the equilibrium Mach wave where the bulk of the disturbance propagates. The surface pressure coefficient is obtained exactly for small-disturbance theory, but it is considerably simplified for the small particle-to-gas mass loading approximation, equivalent to a simple-wave approximation. Other relaxation-wave problems are discussed. Martian dust-storm properties in terms of gas-particle flow parameters are estimated.
Product details
February 2022Adobe eBook Reader
9781108997799
0 pages
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Conservation equations of gas-particle flows
- 3. Small perturbation equations in a stationary frame
- 4. Aerodynamic interpretation of acoustics in gas-particle flows
- 5. Steady small-perturbation theory
- 6. Some limiting cases
- 7. Two-dimensional steady supersonic flow
- 8. Approximate consideration based on a 'rarefied' particle cloud
- 9. Particle collision with the wall and the normal force
- 10. The wall-pressure coefficient
- 11. Numerical examples
- 12. Relation to other relaxation wave problems
- 13. Concluding remarks. Appendix A. Appendix B. References.