Abstract

The two-dimensional electrically conducting magnetohydrodynamic flow of micropolar nanofluid over an extending surface with chemical reaction and secondary slips conditions is deliberated in this article. The flow of nanofluid is treated with heat source/sink and nonlinear thermal radiation impacts. The system of equations is solved analytically and numerically. Both analytical and numerical approaches are compared with the help of figures and tables. In order to improve the validity of the solutions and the method convergence, a descriptive demonstration of residual errors for various factors is presented. Also the convergence of an analytical approach is shown. The impacts of relevance parameters on velocity, micro-rotation, thermal, and concentration fields for first- and second-order velocity slips are accessible through figures. The velocity field heightens with the rise in micropolar, micro-rotation, and primary order velocity parameters, while other parameters have reducing impact on the velocity field. The micro-rotation field reduces with micro-rotation, secondary order velocity slip, and micropolar parameters but escalates with the primary order velocity slip parameter. The thermal field heightens with escalating non-uniform heat sink/source, Biot number, temperature ratio factor, and thermal radiation factor. The concentration field escalates with the increasing Biot number, while reduces with heightening chemical reaction and Schmidt number. The assessment of skin factor, thermal transfer, and mass transfer are calculated through tables.

Highlights

  • List of symbols c, d Constants κ Vertex viscosity B0 Magnetic field strength μ Dynamic viscosity ρ Density σ Electrical conductivity ρcp Heat capacitance k Thermal conductivity

  • The investigators are analyzing a new subclass of nanotechnology called nanofluids

  • In order to present the current work in the field of micropolar fluids, we present the flow of micropolar nanofluid over an extending sheet in the presence of first and second orders velocity slip conditions with chemical reaction

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Summary

Introduction

D Constants κ Vertex viscosity B0 Magnetic field strength μ Dynamic viscosity ρ Density σ Electrical conductivity ρcp Heat capacitance k Thermal conductivity.

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