Abstract

We consider an unsteady non-isothermal incompressible fluid flow. We model heat conduction with Cattaneo’s law instead of the commonly used Fourier’s law, in order to overcome the physical paradox of infinite propagation speed. We assume that the fluid viscosity depends on the temperature, while the thermal capacity depends on the velocity field. The problem is thus described by a Navier–Stokes system coupled with the hyperbolic heat equation. Furthermore, we consider non-standard boundary conditions with Tresca’s friction law on a part of the boundary. By using a time-splitting technique, we construct a sequence of decoupled approximate problems and we prove the convergence of the corresponding approximate solutions, leading to an existence theorem for the coupled fluid flow/heat transfer problem. Finally, we present some numerical results.

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