On the regularity of the interface of a thermodynamically consistent two-phase Stefan problem with surface tension (Q5963016)
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scientific article; zbMATH DE number 6545822
| Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
|---|---|---|---|
| English | On the regularity of the interface of a thermodynamically consistent two-phase Stefan problem with surface tension |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 6545822 |
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On the regularity of the interface of a thermodynamically consistent two-phase Stefan problem with surface tension (English)
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25 February 2016
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free boundary problems
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phase transitions
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Stefan problem
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regularity of moving interfaces
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real analytic solutions
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maximal regularity
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implicit function theorem
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In this paper, the authors study the regularity of the free boundary arising in a thermodynamically consistent two-phase Stefan problem with surface tension. Under regularity assumptions on the coefficients of heat conductivity, the kinetic undercooling and the free energy, the main result of the paper states that the moving interface is jointly \(C^k\)-smooth in time and space, for \(k\in\mathbb{N}\cup\{\infty, \omega\}\), where \(\omega\) is the symbol for real analyticity. The authors approach this problem by using a family of parameter-dependent diffeomorphisms, \(L_p\)-maximal regularity theory, and the implicit function theory.NEWLINENEWLINEIn more detail, the authors consider a general model for phase transitions that is thermodynamically consistent. It is assumed that there is no entropy production on the interface.NEWLINENEWLINEWe let \(\Omega\subset \mathbb{R}^{m+1}\) be a bounded domain of class \(C^2\), for \(m\geq 1\), and we assume that \(\Omega\) is occupied by a material that can undergo phase changes in such a way that at time \(t\), the phase \(i\) occupies the subdomain \(\Omega_i\) of \(\Omega\) for \(i=1,2\). It is assumed that no boundary contact can occur, i.e., \(\partial\Omega_i\cap \partial\Omega=\emptyset\). The interface between the phases is the hypersurface \(\Gamma(t):=\partial\Omega_1(t)\subset\Omega\). The Stefan problem with surface tension, possibly with kinetic undercooling, studied in this paper can be formulated then as finding a family of closed compact hypersurfaces \(\{\Gamma(t)\}_{t\geq 0}\) contained in \(\Omega\) and an appropriately smooth function \(\theta: \mathbb{R}_+\times\overline{\Omega}\rightarrow \mathbb{R}\) such that NEWLINENEWLINENEWLINENEWLINE\[NEWLINE\begin{aligned} \kappa(\theta)\partial_t\theta -\text{div}(d(\theta)\nabla \theta) & =0 \;\text{ in } \Omega\setminus\Gamma(t), \\ NEWLINE\partial_{\nu_{\Omega}}\theta & =0 \;\text{ on } \partial\Omega, \\NEWLINE[[\theta]] & =0 \;\text{ on } \Gamma(t), \\ NEWLINE[[\psi(\theta)]]+\sigma\mathcal{H} & =\gamma(\theta)V \;\text{ on } \Gamma(t),\\NEWLINE[[d(\theta)\partial_{\nu_{\Gamma}}\theta]] & = ( l(\theta)-\gamma(\theta))V)V \;\text{ on } \Gamma(t),\\NEWLINE\theta(0) & =\theta_0, \;\Gamma(0) =\Gamma_0. \end{aligned}NEWLINE\]NEWLINE NEWLINEHere, \(\theta\) denotes the (absolute) temperature, \(\psi_i(\theta)\) are the free energies, \(\nu_{\Gamma}(t)\) is the outer normal field of \(\partial\Omega_1(t)\), \(V(t)\) is the normal velocity of \(\Gamma(t)\), \(\mathcal{H}(t)=\mathcal{H}(\Gamma(t))=-\text{div}_{\Gamma(t)}\nu_{\Gamma}(t)/m\) is the mean curvature of \(\Gamma(t)\) and \([[v]]\) is the jump of a quantity \(v\) across \(\Gamma(t)\). Moreover, \(\kappa_i(\theta)=-\theta\psi_i''(\theta)\) indicates the heat capacity and \(l(\theta)=\theta[[\psi'(\theta)]]\) indicates the latent heat. Finally, \(d_i(\theta)>0\) denotes the coefficient of heat conduction in Fourier's law and \(\gamma(\theta)\geq 0\) is the coefficient of kinetic undercooling.NEWLINENEWLINEThe main results of the paper state that, if \(d_i,\gamma \in C^{k+2}(0,\infty)\), \(\psi_i\in C^{k+3}(0,\infty)\), then under certain regularity, compatibility and well-posedness conditions (which depend on whether \(\gamma \equiv 0\) or not), there exists a unique \(L_p\)-solution \((u,\Gamma)\) for the Stefan problem with surface tension on some possibly small but non-trivial time interval \(J=[0,T]\) and NEWLINENEWLINE\[NEWLINE \mathcal{M}:=\cup_{t\in (0,T)}\{ \{t\}\times \Gamma(t)\} NEWLINE\]NEWLINE NEWLINEis a \(C^k\)-manifold in \(\mathbb{R}^{m+2}\). In particular, each manifold \(\Gamma(t)\) is \(C^k\) for \(t\in (0,T)\).
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