WIAS Preprint No. 1909, (2013)

Continuum thermodynamics of chemically reacting fluid mixtures



Authors

  • Bothe, Dieter
  • Dreyer, Wolfgang

2010 Mathematics Subject Classification

  • 76T10 35Q35 35Q80 76A02 80A17 80A32 92E20

Keywords

  • partial balances, entropy principle, parity and time reversal, Onsager reciprocity relations, reactive flows, multicomponent diffusion, Maxwell-Stefan equations, generalized driving forces, incompressible mixture, constitutive theory, mixture free energy

DOI

10.20347/WIAS.PREPRINT.1909

Abstract

We consider viscous and heat conducting mixtures of molecularly miscible chemical species forming a fluid in which the constituents can undergo chemical reactions. Assuming a common temperature for all components, a first main aim is the derivation of a closed system of partial mass and partial momentum balances plus a common balance of internal energy. This is achieved by careful exploitation of the entropy principle which, in particular, requires appropriate definitions of absolute temperature and chemical potentials based on an adequate definition of thermal energy that excludes diffusive contributions. The latter is crucial in order to obtain a closure framework for the interaction forces between the different species. The interaction forces split into a thermo-mechanical and a chemical part, where the former turns out to be symmetric if binary interactions are assumed. In the non-reactive case, this leads to a system of Navier-Stokes type sub-systems, coupled by interspecies friction forces. For chemically reacting systems and as a new result, the chemical interaction force is identified as a contribution which is non-symmetric, unless chemical equilibrium holds. The theory also provides a rigorous derivation of the so-called generalized thermodynamic driving forces, avoiding the use of approximate solutions to the Boltzmann equations which is common in the engineering literature. Moreover, starting with a continuum thermodynamic field theory right away, local versions of fundamental relations known from thermodynamics of homogeneous systems, like the Gibbs-Duhem equation, are derived. Furthermore, using an appropriately extended version of the entropy principle and introducing cross-effects already before closure as entropy invariant couplings between principal dissipative mechanisms, the Onsager symmetry relations are a strict consequence. With a classification of the factors forming the binary products in the entropy production according to their parity instead of the classical distinction between so-called fluxes and driving forces, the apparent anti-symmetry of certain couplings is thereby also revealed. If the diffusion velocities are small compared to the speed of sound, the well-known Maxwell-Stefan equations together with the so-called generalized thermodynamic driving forces follow in the special case without chemical reactions, thereby neglecting wave phenomena in the diffusive motion. This results in a reduced model having only the constituents' mass balances individually. In the reactive case, this approximation via a scale separation argument is no longer possible. Instead, we first employ the partial mass and mixture internal energy balances, common to both model classes, to identify all constitutive quantities. Combined with the concept of entropy invariant model reduction, leaving the entropy production unchanged under the reduction from partial momentum balances to a single common mixture momentum balance, the chemical interactions yield an additional contribution to the transport coefficients, leading to an extension of the Maxwell-Stefan equations to chemically active mixtures. Within the considered model class for reactive fluid mixtures the new results are achieved for arbitrary free energy functions.

Appeared in

  • Acta Mech., 226 (2015) pp. 1757--1805.

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