Abstract
In this paper, the investigation centered on examining a Maxwell fluid’s convective double diffusive flow carefully considers factors such as chemical reactions, radiation, and the presence of a permeable moving flat plate. Additionally, the study encompassed the effects of heat generation and magnetohydrodynamics (MHD). The governing equations, initially expressed as partial differential equations, were converted into ordinary differential equations using a similarity transformation technique to facilitate the analysis. The computational power of MATLAB’s BVP4C software was harnessed to solve this resultant system of ODEs efficiently. The outcomes of this investigation were presented in the form of graphical representations that vividly depicted the behavior of the flow field, energy conservation, and concentration profiles under various parameter combinations. The research findings were thoughtfully summarized in a table, offering a comprehensive overview of temperature, velocity, and mass profiles across various parameters. These parameters included the Deborah number, chemical reaction rate, Eckert number, Lewis number, Prandtl number, porosity parameter, and MHD parameter. A notable discovery emerging from this study was the inverse relationship observed between nondimensional concentration contours and the magnitude of the chemical reaction rate. Simultaneously, it was observed that higher values of the Maxwell fluid led to a rise in the thickness of the temperature boundary layer. These findings offer valuable insights into the intricate interplay of physical and chemical phenomena in convective flows involving complex fluid properties and boundary conditions. The temperature outline diminishes as the heat generation rate increases, while the concentration profile declines with an elevation in the chemical reaction rate.
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