POLYMERIC DISSIPATIVE CONVECTION FLOW FROM AN INCLINED PLANE WITH CHEMICAL REACTION: NUMERICAL STUDY

2019 
An analytical model is developed to study the effects of viscous dissipation and chemical reaction in viscoelastic convection from an inclined plate as a simulation of electro-conductive polymer materials processing. The Jeffery’s viscoelastic model is deployed to describe the non-Newtonian characteristics of the fluid and provides a good approximation for polymers, which constitutes a novelty of the present work. The normalized nonlinear boundary value problem is solved computationally with the Keller-Box implicit finite-difference technique. Extensive solutions for velocity, surface temperature and concentration, skin friction, heat and transfer rates are visualized numerically and graphically for various thermophysical parameters. Validation is conducted with earlier published work for the case of a vertical plate in the absence of viscous dissipation, chemical reaction and non-Newtonian effects. The boundary layer flow is accelerated with increasing Deborah number whereas temperatures and concentrations are decelerated slightly. Temperatures and concentration are boosted with increasing inclination parameter whereas velocity is lowered. A reverse trend is seen for increasing mixed convection parameter. Increasing chemical reaction reduces velocity and concentration whereas it enhances temperature. Increasing viscous dissipation parameter is found to enhance velocity and temperature whereas it suppresses concentration. This particle study finds applications in different industries like reliable equipment design, nuclear plants, gas turbines and different propulsion devices.
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