Kotschote, Matthias
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Phase-field descriptions of two-phase compressible fluid flow : Interstitial working and a reduction to Korteweg theory
2019-07-01, Freistühler, Heinrich, Kotschote, Matthias
The Navier-Stokes-Allen-Cahn (NSAC), the Navier-Stokes-Cahn-Hilliard (NSCH), and the Navier-Stokes-Korteweg (NSK) equations have been used in the literature to model the dynamics of two-phase fluids. In their previous article Phase-field and Korteweg-type models for the time-dependent flow of compressible two-phase fluids, Arch. Rational Mech. Anal. 224 (2017), 1-20, the authors showed that both NSAC and NSCH reduce to versions of NSK, when one makes the (unphysical) assumption that microforces are absent. The present paper shows that the same reduction property holds without that assumption.
Mixing rules and the Navier-Stokes-Cahn-Hilliard equations for compressible heat-conductive fluids
2016-06-22, Kotschote, Matthias
The framework of this article is the compressible Navier-Stokes-Cahn- Hilliard system for the dynamics of a fluid whose two phases are macroscopically immiscible; partial mixing is permitted leading to narrow transition layers. This so-called NSCH model was originally derived by Lowengrub and Truskinowsky [7], but only for the isothermal case. The purpose of this work is to present the non-isothermal version as well as a well-posedness result. The PDEs constitute a strongly coupled hyperbolicparabolic system.
Dynamical Stability of Non-Constant Equilibria for the Compressible Navier-Stokes Equations in Eulerian Coordinates
2014, Kotschote, Matthias
In this paper we establish global existence and uniqueness of strong solutions to the non-isothermal compressible Navier–Stokes equations in bounded domains. The initial data have to be near equilibria that may be non-constant due to considering large external forces. We are able to show exponential stability of equilibria in the phase space and, above all, to study the problem in Eulerian coordinates. The latter seems to be a novelty, since in works by other authors, global strong L p -solutions have been investigated only in Lagrangian coordinates; Eulerian coordinates are even declared as impossible to deal with. The proof is based on a careful derivation and study of the associated linear problem.
Strong well-posedness of a three phase problem with nonlinear transmission condition
2012, Kotschote, Matthias
We prove existence and uniqueness of strong solutions to a quasilinear parabolic-elliptic system modelling an ionic exchanger. This chemical system consists of three phases connected with nonlinear boundary conditions. The most interesting difficulty of our problem manifests in the nonlinear transmission condition, as almost all quantities are non-linearly involved in this boundary equation. Our approach is based on the contraction mapping principle, where maximal Lp-regularity of the associated linear problem is used to obtain a fixed point equation of the starting problem.
Phase-Field and Korteweg-Type Models for the Time-Dependent Flow of Compressible Two-Phase Fluids
2017-04, Freistühler, Heinrich, Kotschote, Matthias
Various versions of the Navier–Stokes–Allen–Cahn (NSAC), the Navier–Stokes–Cahn–Hilliard (NSCH), and the Navier–Stokes–Korteweg (NSK) equations have been used in the literature to model the dynamics of two-phase fluids. One main purpose of this paper consists in (re-)deriving NSAC, NSCH and NSK from first principles, in the spirit of rational mechanics, for fluids of very general constitutive laws. For NSAC, this deduction confirms and extends a proposal of Blesgen. Regarding NSCH, it continues work of Lowengrub and Truskinovsky and provides the apparently first justified formulation in the non-isothermal case. For NSK, it yields a most natural correction to the formulation by Dunn and Serrin. The paper uniformly recovers as examples various classes of fluids, distinguished according to whether none, one, or both of the phases are compressible, and according to the nature of their co-existence. The latter is captured not only by the mixing energy, but also by a ‘mixing rule’—a constitutive law that characterizes the type of the mixing. A second main purpose of the paper is to communicate the apparently new observation that in the case of two immiscible incompressible phases of different temperature-independent specific volumes, NSAC reduces literally to NSK. This finding may be considered as an independent justification of NSK. An analogous fact is shown for NSCH, which under the same assumption reduces to a new non-local version of NSK.
Models of Two-Phase Fluid Dynamics à la Allen-Cahn, Cahn-Hilliard, and ... Korteweg!
2015, Freistühler, Heinrich, Kotschote, Matthias
One purpose of this paper on the Navier-Stokes-Allen-Cahn (NSAC), the Navier-Stokes-Cahn-Hilliard (NSCH), and the Navier-Stokes-Korteweg (NSK) equations consists in surveying solution theories that one of the authors, M. K., has developed for these three evolutionary systems of partial differential equations. All three theories start from a Helmholtz free energy description of the compressible two-phase fluids whose dynamics they describe in various ways. While a diphasic fluid composed from two constituents of individually constant density is still compressible as long as these two densities are different from each other, the abovementioned solution theories for NSAC and NSCH do not apply in this “quasi-incompressible” case, as the Helmholtz-energy framework degenerates. The second purpose of the paper is to present an observation made by both authors together that shows how to fill these gaps. As ‘by-products’ one obtains (a) in the case that the phases can transform into each other, a justification of NSK, and (b) in the case that they cannot, a new Korteweg type system with non-local ‘viscosity’.
Existence and time-asymptotics of global strong solutions to dynamic Korteweg models
2014, Kotschote, Matthias
In this paper, we investigate isothermal and non-isothermal models of capillary compressible fluids as derived by J. E. Dunn and J. Serrin (1985). We establish global existence and uniqueness for initial data near equilibria, and show exponential stability of equilibrias in the phase space. The proof is based on maximal Lp-regularity results for the associated linear problem.
Spectral analysis for travelling waves in compressible two-phase fluids of Navier–Stokes–Allen–Cahn type
2017-03, Kotschote, Matthias
This is the first part of two papers whose purpose is to investigate stability of travelling wave solutions to the so-called Navier–Stokes–Allen–Cahn system. This set of equations is a combination of the Navier–Stokes equations for compressible fluids supplemented with a phase field description of Allen–Cahn type. The main part of this work deals with studying the problem obtained by linearizing the NSAC system around so-called standing waves. The main results are (1) local well-posedness of the linearized equations and (2) a detailed description of the point and essential spectrum. As a by-product, we obtain analyticity of the associated semigroup.
Strong solutions in the dynamical theory of compressible fluid mixtures
2015, Kotschote, Matthias, Zacher, Rico
In this paper we investigate the compressible Navier–Stokes–Cahn–Hilliard equations (the so-called NSCH model) derived by Lowengrub and Truskinovsky. This model describes the flow of a binary compressible mixture; the fluids are supposed to be macroscopically immiscible, but partial mixing is permitted leading to narrow transition layers. The internal structure and macroscopic dynamics of these layers are induced by a Cahn–Hilliard law that the mixing ratio satisfies. The PDE constitute a strongly coupled hyperbolic–parabolic system. We establish a local existence and uniqueness result for strong solutions.
Strong Solutions of the Navier-Stokes Equations for a Compressible Fluid of Allen-Cahn Type
2012, Kotschote, Matthias
In this work, we study the “Navier–Stokes–Allen–Cahn” system, a combination of the compressible Navier–Stokes equations with an Allen–Cahn phase field description. This model describes two-phase patterns in a flowing liquid including phase transformations. Our purpose is to show the existence and uniqueness of local strong solutions for arbitrary initial data. Part of the proof is based on methods used in a companion paper which investigated the compressible Navier–Stokes equations.