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Mathematical Modelling of Radiative Hydromagnetic Thermosolutal Nanofluid Convection Slip Flow in Saturated Porous Media
Author(s) -
Md. Jashim Uddin,
O. Anwar Bég,
Ahmad Izani Md. Ismail
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
mathematical problems in engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.262
H-Index - 62
eISSN - 1026-7077
pISSN - 1024-123X
DOI - 10.1155/2014/179172
Subject(s) - nanofluid , thermophoresis , mechanics , radiative transfer , thermal radiation , convection , boundary value problem , porous medium , materials science , boundary layer , heat flux , mass flux , physics , heat transfer , thermodynamics , porosity , optics , composite material , quantum mechanics
High temperature thermal processing of nanomaterials is an active area of research. Many techniques are being investigated to manipulate properties of nanomaterials for medical implementation. In this paper, we investigate thermal radiation processing of a nanomaterial fluid sheet extruded in porous media. A mathematical model is developed using a Darcy drag force model. Instead of using linear radiative heat flux, the nonlinear radiative heat flux in the Rosseland approximation is taken into account which makes the present study more meaningful and practically useful. Velocity slip and thermal and mass convective boundary conditions are incorporated in the model. The Buongiornio nanofluid model is adopted wherein Brownian motion and thermophoresis effects are present. The boundary layer conservation equations are transformed using appropriate similarity variables and the resulting nonlinear boundary value problem is solved using Maple 14 which uses the Runge-Kutta-Fehlberg fourth fifth order numerical method. Solutions are validated with previous nonmagnetic and nonradiative computations from the literature, demonstrating excellent agreement. The influence of Darcy number, magnetic field parameter, hydrodynamic slip parameter, convection-conduction parameter, convection-diffusion parameter, and conduction-radiation parameter on the dimensionless velocity, temperature, and nanoparticle concentration fields is examined in detail. Interesting patterns of relevance are observed to improve manufacturing of nanofluids.

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