Abstract
In this paper, a macromolecular non-isothermal model for the incompressible hydrodynamics flow of nematic liquid crystals on \(\mathbb {T}^{3}\) is considered. By a Galerkin approximation, we prove the local existence of a unique strong solution if the initial data \(u_{0}\), \(d_{0}\) and \(\theta_{0}\) satisfy some natural conditions and provided that the viscosity coefficients μ and the heat conductivity κ, h, which are temperature dependent, are properly differentiable and bounded. Moreover, with small initial data, we can extend the local strong solution to be a global one by the argument of contradiction. In this case, the exponential time decay rate is also established.
Similar content being viewed by others
1 Introduction
Liquid crystals, which exist in an intermediate state between isotropic liquid and solid, are materials with rheological properties. There are three phases of liquid crystals (nematic, cholesteric and sematic), and in the nematic phase, the long axis of the constituent molecules tend to align parallel to each other along some commonly preferred direction. The continuum theory for the dynamics of liquid crystal flow was developed by Ericksen [1] and Leslie [2] in the 1960s, and it contains three physical conservation laws: the conservation of mass, the conservation of momentum and the conservation of angular momentum. In the Ericksen-Leslie system, those three conservation laws govern the motions of the fluid by the density ρ, the velocity of the flow u and the mean orientation field d, respectively. For more details, we refer the reader to De Gennes [3]. However, the Ericksen-Leslie system is so complicated that there was no further well-posedness study result until 1989 when Lin [4] derived a simplified version of the Ericksen-Leslie system. Since then, there have been considerable research results on this simplified model.
In 1995, Lin and Liu [5] established the global existence of the weak solutions to the simplified system with a Ginzburg-Landau approximation \(f(d)=\frac{1-\vert d \vert ^{2}}{\varepsilon^{2}}d\) instead of \(\vert \nabla d \vert ^{2}d\) to relax the constraint \(\vert d \vert =1\), that is,
which is a semilinear system called the penalized model. When the viscosity coefficient is large enough, the global existence of the unique classical solution was proved in [5]. Subsequently, they obtained the partial regularity of suitable weak solutions to (1.1) (cf. [6]) and established the same well-posedness theory as in [5] to the full Ericksen-Leslie system with Ginzburg-Landau approximation [7]. When the density is taken into account, the global existence of weak solutions was established in [8] for the incompressible penalized model and in [9, 10] for the compressible case.
On the other hand, there has been much work concerning the non-penalized model of (1.1) where \(f(d)\) in (1.1) is replaced by \(\vert \nabla d \vert ^{2}d\) so that the constraint \(\vert d \vert =1\) is satisfied. The latter one is much more difficult to tackle since now one has a quasilinear system with a quadratic growth term \(\vert \nabla d \vert ^{2}d\) and a non-convex constraint \(\vert d \vert =1\). A complete discussion of the convergence \(\varepsilon\to 0\) in (1.1) is unsolved. We refer the reader to [11–15] for the existence of global weak solutions in dimension two and to [16–18] for the uniqueness. Nevertheless, in general cases, the regularity and uniqueness of weak solution is still an open problem for the three-dimensional case; see [19, 20]. In addition, the reader can also refer to [21–26] for the global existence of unique strong solution to the incompressible model and [27, 28] for the compressible one. The review of the literature is not intended to be exhaustive but as a rough description. A more complete bibliography on the development of the mathematical theories of liquid crystals has been given by Lin and Wang in [29].
As was shown by Leslie [30] that the mechanical balance equations must be supplemented by an equation to describe the absolute temperature θ, the physical conservation law the conservation of energy should also be included. In [31], the authors proposed a non-isothermal penalized model for the nematic liquid crystals with temperature-dependent viscosity, elasticity and thermal conductivities,
where \(q=\kappa(\theta)\nabla\theta+h(\theta)(d\cdot\nabla\theta)d\), and established the existence of the global weak solutions to this model, see [32] for local existence of the unique strong solution. Later, in [33], the authors proposed another non-isothermal model to take the effects of stretching and rotation for large molecules into account; cf. [5]. [33] and [31]; also one dealt with the penalized models.
In this paper, a non-isothermal, large molecule model proposed by Li and Xin in [34] is considered, in which the constraint \(\vert d \vert =1\) is maintained. Precisely, we study the system
where
We impose the initial conditions
and the periodic boundary conditions
Moreover, the temperature-dependent coefficients \(\mu(\cdot),\kappa(\cdot),h(\cdot)\in C^{2}([0,\infty))\) are supposed to satisfy
where \(\underline{\kappa},\bar{\kappa},\bar{\kappa^{\prime}},\bar{\kappa^{\prime\prime}},\underline{h},\bar{h},\bar{h^{\prime}}, \bar{h^{\prime\prime}},\underline{\mu},\bar{\mu},\bar{\mu^{\prime}},\bar{\mu^{\prime\prime}}\) are given positive constants.
The existence of global weak solutions for (1.3)-(1.5) in dimension two has been established in [34]. In this paper, we aim to prove the local and global existence of the unique strong solution.
Before going on, we would like to have some more words on this system. When the direction field d is a constant vector field, the system (1.3) reduces to a non-isentropic incompressible Navier-Stokes system with temperature-dependent viscosity coefficients, to which the global existence of weak solutions was showed in [35]. Moreover, Cho and Kim in [36] studied a more general non-isentropic incompressible Navier-Stokes system, where the transport coefficients depend on both temperature and mass density. The authors established the local existence and uniqueness of strong solution; see also [37]. For the compressible cases, there are many articles on the global existence of unique classical solution with large initial data for one-dimensional problems; see [38–41] for examples.
The rest of this paper is arranged as follows. In Section 2, we introduce some notations and give the main theorems. The approximate solutions to this problem will be constructed by means of Galerkin method in Section 3. After establishing some suitable a priori estimates in Section 4, we will prove the local existence, global existence, and uniqueness in Section 5, 6, 7, respectively.
2 Notations and theorems
We introduce some notations.
-
\(W=\{u\in H^{1}(\Omega)\mid \nabla\cdot u=0, u \text{ satisfies periodic boundary conditions } \mbox{(1.5)}\}\).
-
\(\int f:=\int_{\Omega}f \,\mathrm{d}x, L^{p}:=L^{p}(\Omega),H^{k}:=H^{k}(\Omega)=W^{k,2}(\Omega), p\geq2, k\geq 1\),
-
\(\Vert \cdot \Vert _{q}:=\Vert \cdot \Vert _{L^{q}(\Omega)}\), \(\Vert \cdot \Vert _{H^{k}}:=\Vert \cdot \Vert _{H^{k}(\Omega)}\), \(q\geq 2\), \(k\geq 1\).
-
\(A\lesssim B\) denotes \(A\leq CB\), where \(C > 0\) is an absolute positive constant.
-
For \(3\times 3\) matrices \(A=(a_{ij})_{1\leq i,j\leq 3}\) and \(B=(b_{ij})_{1\leq i,j\leq 3}\), we denote
$$A:B=\sum^{3}_{i,j=1}a_{ij}b_{ij}. $$
Moreover, the usual summation convention is used.
The main results of this paper are the following theorems.
Theorem 2.1
Assume that \((u_{0},\theta_{0},d_{0})\in H^{2}\cap W\times H^{2}\times H^{3}\). Then there exists \(T^{*}>0\), such that, for any positive time \(T \in(0,T^{*})\), there exists a unique solution \((u,\theta,d,p)\) to the system (1.3)-(1.5) on \([0,T]\) satisfying
With small initial data, one can extend the local solution in Theorem 2.1 to a global one.
Theorem 2.2
Assume that the initial data \((u_{0},d_{0},\theta_{0})\) satisfies \(\nabla\cdot u_{0}=0,\vert d_{0} \vert =1\), and \(\theta_{0}\geq\underline{\theta}_{0}>0\). Then there exists a unique global-in-time strong solution \((u, d, \theta)\) to the system (1.3)-(1.5) satisfying
provided that
for sufficiently small \(\delta_{0}>0\).
Moreover, there exists a constant \(\alpha>0\), such that the decay estimate
is valid for some positive constant C.
3 Galerkin approximation
In this section, we will get an approximate solution for the system (1.3)-(1.5) by means of the Galerkin approximation.
Denote \(X=H^{2}\cap W\) and its finite-dimensional subspaces
where \(\{\Phi^{m}\}_{m=1}^{\infty}\) is a complete normal orthogonal basis of X. This means that \((\Phi^{i},\Phi^{j})=\delta_{ij}\), where \(\delta_{ij}=1\) if \(i=j\), while \(\delta_{ij}=0\) if \(i\neq j\).
For any given m, and \(k=1,2,\ldots,m\), we study the following approximate system:
where
and \((f,g):=\int_{\Omega}f\cdot g\,\mathrm{d}x\) is the inner product of \(L^{2}(\Omega;\mathbb{R}^{3})\).
By applying the fixed point theorem, we can show that there exist a \(T_{0}>0\) depending on \(u_{0},d_{0},\theta_{0},m\) and Ω such that the system (3.1) possesses a strong solution \((u^{m},d^{m},\theta^{m})\), in which the velocity field is in the form \(u^{m}(x,t)=\sum^{m}_{i=1}\tilde{g}^{m}_{i}(t)\Phi^{i}(x)\) where \(\tilde{g}^{m}_{i}(t)\) satisfies \(\tilde{g}^{m}_{i}(0)=(u_{0},\Phi^{i})\) and \(\tilde{g}^{m}_{i}(t)\) is continuously differentiable. Since this process is similar to that in [32], we omit the details here. Similar to the system in [32], the following lemma follows from the maximum principle.
Lemma 3.1
Let \((u^{m},d^{m},\theta^{m})\) be a solution to system (3.1) with initial data \((u^{m}_{0},d_{0},\theta_{0})\) satisfy \(\vert d_{0} \vert =1\) and \(\sup_{\Omega}\theta_{0}\geq\underline{\theta}_{0}>0\). Then, for any \((x,t)\in\Omega\times(0,T_{0})\), it is valid that
It should be noted that the constant \(T_{0}\) depends on m. For a uniformly valid \(T_{0}>0\) for every \(m\in\mathbb{N}^{*}\), we need the estimates in next section.
4 Uniform a priori estimation
It should be noted that by applying a Helmholtz decomposition, (3.1)1 can be rewritten as
where \(\nabla p^{m}\) is decided by the property that \(\Phi^{i},i=1,2,\ldots,m\) are all divergence-free. Thus, the system (3.1) is equivalent to
where
To show the solvability of the original system (1.3), in this section, we will omit the superscript m for convenience to establish the uniform estimates, which enable us to take \(m\rightarrow\infty\) in (4.2). On account of the periodic boundary conditions, it is easy to deduce the equivalence of \(\Vert \nabla^{2}f \Vert _{2}\) and \(\Vert \Delta f \Vert _{2}\) by integration by parts and the fact, by the divergence theorem, that
which enables us to apply the Poincaré inequality to \(\nabla^{l} f\), that is,
In addition, since \(\vert d \vert =1\), we have \(\vert \nabla d \vert ^{2}=-\Delta d\cdot d\leq \vert \Delta d \vert \).
Lemma 4.1
Basic energy inequality
For the solution \((u,d,\theta)\) of system (4.2)
Proof
Multiplying (4.2)1 by u, integrating by parts over Ω and using (4.2)2 give
Multiplying (4.2)3 by \(\lambda(\Delta d+\vert \nabla d \vert ^{2}d)\) and integrating by parts over Ω imply that
Integrating (4.2)4 over Ω yields
Putting (4.4)-(4.6) together, one gets
Notice that
Therefore, it follows that
This lemma follows from integrating (4.8) over \((0,t)\). □
In the next lemma, we give some high-order estimates.
Lemma 4.2
For any \(t>0\), it is valid that
where the constant C depends only on the initial data and known constants.
Proof
First of all, applying ∇ to (4.2)1, testing the result by \(\nabla\Delta u\) and integrating by parts over Ω, we have
where
Substituting (4.11)-(4.13) into (4.10), using the Sobolev embedding inequalities, interpolation inequalities and Young inequalities yield
Then, applying ∇Δ to (4.2)3, testing the result by \(\lambda\nabla\Delta d\) and integrating by parts over Ω, one sees that
Notice that
Thus, it follows from (4.15) that
where the Sobolev embedding inequalities, interpolation inequalities and Young inequalities have been used.
Furthermore, applying ∇ to (4.2)4, testing it by \(\nabla\Delta \theta\) and integrating on Ω imply that
where
Substituting (4.18)-(4.21) into (4.17), using the Sobolev embedding inequalities, interpolation inequalities and Young inequalities give
Summing up (4.14), (4.16), and (4.22) with \(\varepsilon>0\) small enough, one shows (4.9). □
With these lemmas, we can obtain the local uniform estimates for the approximate solutions.
Lemma 4.3
There exists a finite time \(T^{*}>0\) such that, for any \(T\in(0,T^{*})\), it is valid that
where C depends only on initial data and known constants.
Proof
Denote
Then it follows from (4.9) that
In particular, one obtains
which implies that
Integrating this inequality on \([0,t]\) yields
Take \(T^{*}:=[2C\mathcal{F}(0)^{2}]^{-1}\). Then, for any \(T\in(0,T^{*})\), one has
Consequently, it follows from (4.24) that
Integrating it on \([0,t]\subset[0,T]\) and using the Poincaré inequality, we deduce (4.23). □
For a more complete description to the approximate solution, we need the lemma below.
Lemma 4.4
For any \(0< T< T^{*}\), it is valid that
where \(T^{*}\) is defined in Lemma 4.3 and C depends only on initial data and known constants.
Proof
First, we give some estimates for ∇p.
Since \(\nabla\cdot u=0\), it yields by taking the divergence to (4.2)1
Then, by elliptic estimates, the Hölder inequality, the Sobolev embedding inequalities, the Young inequality, and (4.3), one has
Second, we give estimates for \(\nabla u_{t}\).
Applying ∇ to (4.2)1, testing the result by \(\nabla u_{t}\), integrating by parts on Ω, and using the Cauchy inequality, we have
Third, we give estimates for \(\Delta d_{t}\).
Applying Δ to (4.2)3, it is easy to see that
Fourthly, we give estimates for \(\nabla\theta_{t}\).
Applying ∇ to (4.2)4, we get
Finally, it is easy to obtain from the above estimates that
Equation (4.27) follows from (4.29)-(4.34) and (4.23). □
Now we conclude that there exists a \(T_{0}>0\) such that, for any given \(m\in\mathbb{N}^{*}\), there exists a strong solution \((u^{m},d^{m},\theta^{m},p^{m})\) to system (4.2) satisfying (4.23) and (4.27).
5 Local existence
It is concluded from the previous section that there exists \(T^{*}>0\), such that, for any \(T\in(0,T^{*})\), the following estimates are valid:
To prove the convergence of sequences \((u^{m},d^{m},\theta^{m},p^{m})\), we need the compactness lemma.
Lemma 5.1
Simon [42]
Assume that \(X,B\) and Y are three Banach spaces with \(X\hookrightarrow\hookrightarrow B\hookrightarrow Y\). Then the following hold true.
-
(i)
If F is a bounded subset of \(L^{p}(0,T;X)\), \(1\leq p<\infty\), and \(\frac{\partial F}{\partial t}=\{\frac{\partial f}{\partial t}\mid f\in F\}\) is bounded in \(L^{1}(0,T;Y)\), then F is relatively compact in \(L^{p}(0,T;B)\).
-
(ii)
If F is a bounded subset of \(L^{\infty}(0,T;X)\), and \(\frac{\partial F}{\partial t}\) is bounded in \(L^{r}(0,T;Y)\), where \(r>1\), then F is relatively compact in \(C([0,T];B)\).
Since \(H^{2} \hookrightarrow\hookrightarrow H^{1}\hookrightarrow L^{2}\), it is clear from Lemma 5.1 and (5.1) that \(\{u^{m}\}^{\infty}_{m=1}\subset C(0,T;H^{1})\) is relatively compact, which means the existence of convergent subsequence, still denoted by \(\{u^{m}\}\), satisfying \(u^{m}\rightarrow u\) strongly in \(C([0,T];H^{1})\). Similarly, we have \(d^{m}\rightarrow d\) strongly in \(C([0,T];H^{2})\) and \(\theta^{m}\rightarrow \theta\) strongly in \(C([0,T];H^{1})\).
With these convergence arguments in hand, it is easy to conclude that, as \(m\rightarrow\infty\), each term of system (4.2) converges to the corresponding term in (1.3). Here we select two terms to show the convergence, and the others can be done in a similar manner.
Lemma 5.2
Assume that
Then it is true that
Proof
Notice that
Then, as \(m\rightarrow\infty\), the uniform estimates and convergence of \((u^{m},d^{m},\theta^{m})\) imply that
Thus, (5.6) follows. Similarly, as \(m\rightarrow \infty\),
The proof of this lemma is completed. □
In conclusion, \((u(x,t),\theta(x,t),d(x,t),p(x,t))\) solves system (1.3)-(1.5) on \(\Omega\times[0,T]\) and satisfies
6 Global existence
In this section, we will prove that the local strong solutions constructed in Section 5 are also global in time provided that the initial data is small enough.
On one hand, we re-estimate (4.14), (4.16), and (4.22), respectively, as follows:
Then, for suitable larger \(C_{2}\), calculating ((6.1) + (6.2)) × \(C_{2}\,+ \) (6.3), we have
where we denote
Define
Then, for any \(t\in(0,T_{0})\), (6.4) implies that
Thus, integrating (6.8) over \((0,s)\subset(0,t)\) gives
In particular, we have
once \(\mathscr{E}(0)\) satisfies \(C_{3} (\sqrt{2\mathscr{E}(0)}+2\mathscr{E}(0) )<1\), i.e. \(\mathscr{E}(0)<\frac{2+C_{3}}{4C_{3}}-\frac{1}{4}\sqrt{1+\frac{4}{C_{3}}}\).
If \(T_{0}<+\infty\), then it follows from (6.7) and (6.10) that
which is a contradiction. Therefore, \(T_{0}=+\infty\) and
where \(\varepsilon_{0}:=1-C_{3} (\sqrt{2\mathscr{E}(0)}+2\mathscr{E}(0) )\).
On the other hand, multiplying (4.2)4 by θ and integrating by parts over Ω gives
Then it follows from the Sobolev embedding inequality, (4.3), (6.11), and the Hölder inequality that
Thus, by virtue of (4.3), (6.11) and (6.13), (2.2) is deduced with \(\delta_{0}=\frac{2+C_{3}}{4C_{3}}-\frac{1}{4}\sqrt{1+\frac{4}{C_{3}}}\).
Moreover, applying the Poincaré inequality to (6.8), we get
Consequently, taking \(\alpha=C\varepsilon_{0}\) and applying the Gronwall inequality to (6.14) we deduce (2.4).
7 Uniqueness
Assume that \((u_{i},d_{i},\theta_{i},\nabla p_{i}),i=1,2\) are two strong solutions to system (1.3)-(1.5) on \(\Omega\times[0,T]\) satisfying (5.1)-(5.4) and denote
where \(T=T^{*}\) for the local solutions and \(T=+\infty\) for the global ones.
Then \((\bar{u},\bar{d},\bar{\theta},\nabla\bar{p})\) solves the following initial-boundary value problem:
where, for convenience, we denote
Following the idea given by [43], we indicate that
In what follows, we will show that \((\bar{u},\bar{\theta},\bar{d},\nabla \bar{p})=(0,0,0,0)\) a.e. in \(\Omega\times[0,T]\).
First of all, multiplying (7.1)1 by ū and integrating by parts over Ω give
where
Substituting (7.5)-(7.7) into (7.4), we get
Similarly, multiplying (7.1)3 by d̄ and integrating by parts over Ω we deduce
Moreover, multiplying (7.1)3 by \(\lambda\Delta\bar{d}\) and integrating by parts over Ω yield
In addition, multiplying (7.1)4 by θ̄ and integrating by parts over Ω give
where
Substituting (7.12)-(7.14) into (7.11), we obtain
Finally, summing up (7.8)-(7.10) and (7.15), we arrive at
where the assumption (1.6) has been used to get \(\underline{\mu},\underline{\kappa}\), and the formula \((a\times b)\cdot c=(b\times c)\cdot a\) has been used to eliminate the last term in (7.8) and in (7.10).
Notice that
Then, substituting (7.17)-(7.21) into (7.16), taking ε small enough and using (5.1)-(5.4) for \((u_{i},d_{i},\theta_{i}),i=1,2\) imply that
Consequently, it follows from the Gronwall inequality and the initial condition \((\bar{u},\bar{d}, \bar{\theta})|_{t=0}=(0,0,0)\) that
from which one infers that \(\bar{u}=\bar{d}=\bar{\theta}=0 \mbox{ a.e. }\Omega\times[0,T]\). The fact that \(\nabla\bar{p}=0, \mbox{ a.e. }\Omega\times[0,T]\) can also be got.
The proof of uniqueness of the strong solution to the initial-boundary value problem (1.3)-(1.5) is completed, where p is uniquely determined up to a constant.
8 Conclusion
There is a lot literature focused on the isothermal models for liquid crystals, but still few papers considering the non-isothermal ones. Based on the Galerkin approximation, we first established the existence of the local-in-time strong solutions to system (1.3)-(1.5) by a fixed point theorem and energy methods. Furthermore, the uniqueness of the strong solution is also proved by energy methods. Finally, under the assumption of small initial data, we showed the global-in-time existence of the established unique strong solution and obtained the decay rate of the global strong solution. These results for a bounded domain with periodic boundary condition extend the corresponding known results for the isothermal models and is a part of the well-posedness theories for the non-isothermal model. Based on the results in this paper, we shall consider a general bounded domain case and Cauchy problems in the whole space in forthcoming studies. The author believes that the studies of the non-isothermal model might lead us to a more complete understanding of the behavior of the flow of liquid crystals.
References
Ericksen, J: Conservation laws for liquid crystals. Trans. Soc. Rheol. 5, 22-34 (1961)
Leslie, F: Some constitutive equations for liquid crystals. Arch. Ration. Mech. Anal. 28, 256-283 (1968)
De Gennes, P: The Physics of Liquid Crystals. Oxford University Press, London (1974)
Lin, F: Nonlinear theory of defects in nematic liquid crystals: phase transition and flow phenomena. Commun. Pure Appl. Math. 42, 789-814 (1989)
Lin, F, Liu, C: Nonparabolic dissipative systems modeling the flow of liquid crystals. Commun. Pure Appl. Math. 48(5), 501-537 (1995)
Lin, F, Liu, C: Partial regularity of the dynamic system modeling the flow of liquid crystals. Discrete Contin. Dyn. Syst. 2(1), 1-22 (1996)
Lin, F, Liu, C: Existence of solutions for the Ericksen-Leslie system. Arch. Ration. Mech. Anal. 154(2), 135-156 (2000)
Jiang, F, Tan, Z: Global weak solution to the flow of liquid crystals system. Math. Methods Appl. Sci. 32, 2243-2266 (2009)
Chu, Y, Hao, Y, Liu, X: Global weak solutions to a general liquid crystals system. Discrete Contin. Dyn. Syst., Ser. A 33, 2681-2710 (2013)
Wang, D, Yu, C: Global weak solution and large time behavior for the compressible flow of liquid crystals. Arch. Ration. Mech. Anal. 204, 881-915 (2012)
Huang, J, Lin, F, Wang, C: Regularity and existence of global solutions to the Ericksen-Leslie system in \(\mathbb{R}^{2}\). Commun. Math. Phys. 331, 805-850 (2014)
Hong, M: Global existence of solutions of the simplified Ericksen-Leslie system in dimension two. Calc. Var. Partial Differ. Equ. 40, 15-36 (2011)
Hong, M, Xin, Z: Global existence of solutions of the liquid crystal flow for the Oseen-Frank model in \(\mathbb{R}^{2}\). Adv. Math. 231, 1364-1400 (2012)
Lin, F, Lin, J, Wang, C: Liquid crystal flows in two dimensions. Arch. Ration. Mech. Anal. 197, 297-336 (2010)
Wang, W, Wang, M: Global existence of weak solution for the 2-D Ericksen-Leslie system. Calc. Var. Partial Differ. Equ. 51, 915-962 (2014)
Li, J, Titi, E, Xin, Z: On the uniqueness of weak solutions to the Ericksen-Leslie liquid crystal model in \(\mathbb{R}^{2}\). Math. Models Methods Appl. Sci. 26, 803-822 (2016)
Lin, F, Wang, C: On the uniqueness of heat flow of harmonic maps and hydrodynamic flow of nematic liquid crystals. Chin. Ann. Math. 31B, 921-938 (2010)
Wang, M, Wang, W, Zhang, Z: On the uniqueness of weak solutions for the 2-D Ericksen-Leslie system. Discrete Contin. Dyn. Syst., Ser. B 21, 919-941 (2016)
Lin, J, Lai, B, Wang, C: Global finite energy weak solutions to the compressible nematic liquid crystal flow in dimension three. SIAM J. Math. Anal. 47(4), 2952-2983 (2015)
Lin, F, Wang, C: Global existence of weak solutions of the nematic liquid crystal flow in dimension three. Commun. Pure Appl. Math. 69(8), 1532-1571 (2016)
Ding, S, Huang, J, Xia, F: Global existence of strong solutions for incompressible hydrodynamic flow of liquid crystals with vacuum. Filomat 27(7), 1247-1257 (2013)
Gala, S, Liu, Q, Ragusa, M: Logarithmically improved regularity criterion for the nematic liquid crystal flows in \(\dot{B}^{-1}_{\infty,\infty}\) space. Comput. Math. Appl. 65(11), 1738-1745 (2013)
Gala, S, Guo, Z, Ragusa, M: A remark on the regularity criterion of Boussinesq equations with zero heat conductivity. Appl. Math. Lett. 27, 70-73 (2014)
Wen, H, Ding, S: Solutions of incompressible hydrodynamic flow of liquid crystals. Nonlinear Anal., Real World Appl. 12, 1510-1531 (2011)
Li, J: Global strong solutions to incompressible nematic liquid crystal flow. Methods Appl. Anal. 22(2), 201-220 (2015)
Li, J: Global strong and weak solutions to nematic liquid crystal flow in two dimensions. Nonlinear Anal., Theory Methods Appl. 99, 80-94 (2014)
Chu, Y, Liu, X, Liu, X: Strong solutions to the compressible liquid crystal system. Pac. J. Math. 257(1), 37-52 (2012)
Huang, T, Wang, C, Wen, H: Strong solutions of the compressible nematic liquid crystal flow. J. Differ. Equ. 252(3), 2222-2265 (2012)
Lin, F, Wang, C: Recent developments of analysis for hydrodynamic flow of nematic liquid crystals. Philos. Trans. R. Soc., Math. Phys. Eng. Sci. 372, Article ID 20130361 (2014)
Leslie, F: Thermal effects in cholesteric liquid crystals. Proc. R. Soc. Lond. A 307, 359-372 (1968)
Feireisl, E, Rocca, E, Schimperna, G: On a non-isothermal model for nematic liquid crystals. Nonlinearity 24(1), 243-257 (2011)
Ding, S, Li, Q: Local existence of unique strong solution to non-isothermal model for incompressible nematic liquid crystals in 3D. Appl. Math. Comput. 290, 487-506 (2016)
Feireisl, E, Fremond, M, Rocca, E, Schimperna, G: A new approach to non-isothermal models for nematic liquid crystals. Arch. Ration. Mech. Anal. 205, 651-672 (2012)
Li, J, Xin, Z: Global existence of weak solutions to the non-isothermal nematic liquid crystals in 2D. Acta Math. Sci. 36B(4), 973-1014 (2016)
Feireisl, E, Málek, J: On the Navier-Stokes equations with temperature-dependent transport coefficients. Differ. Equ. Nonlinear Mech. 2006, Article ID 90616 (2006)
Cho, Y, Kim, H: Existence result for heat-conducting viscous incompressible fluids with vacuum. J. Korean Math. Soc. 45(3), 645-681 (2008)
Zhang, T, Fang, D: Existence and uniqueness results for viscous heat-conducting 3-D fluid with vacuum. J. Partial Differ. Equ. 21(4), 347-376 (2008)
Jenssen, H, Karper, T: One-dimensional compressible flow with temperature-dependent transport coefficients. SIAM J. Math. Anal. 42(2), 904-930 (2010)
Wen, H, Zhu, C: Global classical large solutions to Navier-Stokes equations for viscous compressible and heat-conducting fluids with vacuum. SIAM J. Math. Anal. 45(2), 431-468 (2013)
Pan, R, Zhang, W: Compressible Navier-Stokes equations with temperature dependent heat conductivity. Commun. Math. Sci. 13(2), 401-425 (2015)
Liu, H, Yang, T, Zhao, H, Zou, Q: One-dimensional compressible Navier-Stokes equations with temperature dependent transport coefficients and large data. SIAM J. Math. Anal. 46(3), 2185-2228 (2014)
Simon, J: Compact sets in the space \(L^{p}(0,T;B)\). Ann. Math. Pures Appl. 146, 65-96 (1987)
Gong, H, Li, J, Xu, C: Local well-posedness of strong solutions to density-dependent liquid crystal system. Nonlinear Anal., Theory Methods Appl. 147, 26-44 (2016)
Acknowledgements
The author would like to thank Prof. Shijin Ding and Mr. Jinrui Huang for their invaluable comments, which helped to improve the presentation of this paper. This work is supported by the Innovation Project of Graduate School of South China Normal University (No. 2016YN16, No. 2016lkxm23).
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Additional information
Competing interests
The author declares that there is no competing interest.
Author’s contributions
The author declares that this study is independently finished.
Publisher’s Note
Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Rights and permissions
Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.
About this article
Cite this article
Li, Q. Global well-posedness of the non-isothermal model for incompressible nematic liquid crystals. Bound Value Probl 2017, 113 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13661-017-0844-3
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13661-017-0844-3