Thermo-hydrodynamics of thin surface films in heterogeneous combustion (Q1370104)

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scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1077884
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Thermo-hydrodynamics of thin surface films in heterogeneous combustion
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1077884

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    Thermo-hydrodynamics of thin surface films in heterogeneous combustion (English)
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    4 June 1998
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    Heterogeneous reactions under transport control can be modelled in terms of a film of reaction products covering the reaction surface. Such a surface defines a unique direction in space which may be used to classify transport processes as transverse or longitudinal. Since crossed-gradient transport occurs, a Péclet number is introduced, representing the ratio of the velocities characterizing transverse and longitudinal transport, with transverse transport being by film diffusion of some reacting species and longitudinal transport corresponding to film flow as with wetting processes. The long-wave approximation is derived by an application of the method of strained variables which leads to a film equation for the spatio-temporal evolution of the film thickness \(h\) which represents the crucial element for a complete solution of the thermo-hydrodynamics of the layer. The evolution of the surface layer is shown to be a generalized reaction-diffusion process, with surface waves representing dynamical transitions between surface phases.
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    transverse transport
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    surface ignition
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    surface extinction
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    reaction surface
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    Péclet number
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    longitudinal transport
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    long-wave approximation
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    method of strained variables
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    generalized reaction-diffusion process
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    surface waves
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    surface phases
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