Abstract

An important aspect of constructing discrete velocity models (DVMs) for the Boltzmann equation is to obtain the right number of collision invariants. It is a well-known fact that DVMs can also have extra collision invariants, so called spurious collision invariants, in plus to the physical ones. A DVM with only physical collision invariants, and so without spurious ones, is called normal. For binary mixtures also the concept of supernormal DVMs was introduced, meaning that in addition to the DVM being normal, the restriction of the DVM to any single species also is normal. Here we introduce generalizations of this concept to DVMs for multicomponent mixtures. We also present some general algorithms for constructing such models and give some concrete examples of such constructions. One of our main results is that for any given number of species, and any given rational mass ratios we can construct a supernormal DVM. The DVMs are constructed in such a way that for half-space problems, as the Milne and Kramers problems, but also nonlinear ones, we obtain similar structures as for the classical discrete Boltzmann equation for one species, and therefore we can apply obtained results for the classical Boltzmann equation.

Highlights

  • The Boltzmann equation is a fundamental equation in kinetic theory [17,18]

  • discrete velocity models (DVMs) without spurious collision invariants are called normal. Their construction is a classical problem that has been studied for single species as well as binary mixtures [11,13,14,19,20,21,28,29,30]

  • We introduce a new concept of semi-supernormal DVMs for multicomponent mixtures for normal DVMs, with the property that the restrictions of the DVM to the single species are normal

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Summary

Introduction

The Boltzmann equation is a fundamental equation in kinetic theory [17,18]. It is a wellknown fact that discrete velocity models (DVMs) can approximate the Boltzmann equation. DVMs without spurious collision invariants are called normal Their construction is a classical problem that has been studied for single species as well as binary mixtures [11,13,14,19,20,21,28,29,30]. We introduce a new concept of semi-supernormal DVMs for multicomponent mixtures for normal DVMs, with the property that the restrictions of the DVM to the single species are normal. The construction of the DVMs is such that for half-space problems [3], as the Milne and Kramers problems [2], and nonlinear ones [27], one obtain similar structures as for the classical discrete Boltzmann equation for one species.

Normal Discrete Velocity Models
Supernormal DVMs for Binary Mixtures
DVMs for Mixtures
Supernormal DVMs for Mixtures
Construction of a Family of Supernormal DVMs for Mixtures
Boundary Layers for Mixtures
Linearized Problem
Non-linear Problem
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