Abstract

The direct simulation Monte Carlo method has been used to study the breakdown of translational equilibrium in steady cylindrical and spherical expansions of hard sphere and Maxwell molecules. The study of spherical expansions was extended to the combined translational and rotational breakdown in a gas of rough sphere molecules. The breakdown of translational equilibrium in a complete one-dimensional rarefaction wave in a hard sphere gas was also investigated. In all cases, the breakdown of equilibrium was found to coincide with a constant value of the ratio of the logarithmic time derivative of density following the motion of the fluid to the collision frequency in the gas. This value is proposed as an empirical breakdown criterion for use in engineering studies of systems which involve low-density expansions from continuum to highly rarefied conditions. The onset of nonequilibrium was marked by the divergence of the separate kinetic temperatures based on the molecular velocity components parallel and normal to the flow direction. The parallel temperature in a steady expansion gradually froze to a constant value, in qualitative agreement with experiment and with analytical studies employing the BGK model. The rate of decay of the temperature based on the normal velocity components was greater than the isentropic rate for hard sphere molecules, but less than it was for Maxwell molecules.

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