Abstract

An asymptotic expansion of the solution, for large Schmidt numbers, of the system of equations of a chemically nonequilibrium multicomponent boundary layer on the catalytic surface of a blunt body [1] is used to obtain expressions for the diffusion fluxes of the reaction products and chemical elements and the heat flux as functions of the gradients of the reaction product concentrations, chemical element concentrations and enthalpy across the boundary layer. It is shown that when the body is exposed to a supersonic air flow, the diffusion separation of the chemical element oxygen depends importantly on the atom concentration at the outer edge of the boundary layer and the nature of the homogeneous and heterogeneous catalytic reactions. If the surface promotes the rapid recombination of oxygen atoms and is chemically neutral with respect to nitrogen atoms, then an excess of the chemical element oxygen is formed on the body. Otherwise we get an enhanced concentration of the element nitrogen. As distinct from the case of an ideally catalytic wall [2–4], on a surface possessing the property of catalytic selectivity the diffusion separation of chemical elements takes place even when only atoms are present at the outer edge of the boundary layer. On a chemically neutral surface diffusion separation may be caused by homogeneous recombination reactions between oxygen and nitrogen atoms if their rate constants are essentially different.

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