Abstract.
In this paper we study the effect of adopting a two-temperature model of microscopic heat transfer on the classical Cheng & Minkowycz [1] vertical free convection boundary-layer flow in a porous medium. Such a model, which allows the solid and fluid phases not to be in local thermal equilibrium, is found to modify substantially the behaviour of the flow relatively close to the leading edge. A companion paper deals with the (parabolic) boundary-layer theory, but the present work investigates in detail how elliptical effects are manifested. This is undertaken by solving the full equations of motion, rather than the boundary-layer approximation. In general, it is found that at any point in the flow, the temperature of the solid phase is higher than that of the fluid phase, and therefore that the thermal field of the solid phase is of greater extent than that of the fluid phase. The microscopic inter-phase heat transfer is characterised by the coefficient, H, and it is shown that these thermal non-equilibrium effects are strongest when H is small.
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Received: April 10, 2000
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Rees, D. Vertical free convective boundary-layer flow in a porous medium using a thermal nonequilibrium model: Elliptical effects. Z. angew. Math. Phys. 54, 437–448 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00033-003-0032-4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00033-003-0032-4