Abstract

Abstract A study has been carried for a viscous, incompressible electrically conducting MHD blood flow with temperature-dependent thermal conductivity and viscosity through a stretching surface in the presence of thermal radiation, viscous dissipation, and chemical reaction. The flow is subjected to a uniform transverse magnetic field normal to the flow. The governing coupled partial differential equations are converted into a set of non-linear ordinary differential equations (ODE) using similarity analysis. The resultant non-linear coupled ordinary differential equations are solved numerically using the boundary value problem solver (bvp4c) in MATLAB with a convincible accuracy. The effects of the physical parameters such as viscosity parameter ( μ ( T ˜ b ) ) \left({\mu ({{\tilde T}_b})} \right) , permeability parameter (β), magnetic field parameter (M), Local Grashof number (Gr) for thermal diffusion, Local modified Grashof number for mass diffusion (Gm), the Eckert number (Ec), the thermal conductivity parameter ( K ( T ˜ b ) ) \left({K({{\tilde T}_b})} \right) on the velocity, temperature, concentration profiles, skin-friction coefficient, Nusselt number, and Sherwood number are presented graphically. The physical visualization of flow parameters that appeared in the problem is discussed with the help of various graphs to convey the real life application in industrial and engineering processes. A comparison has been made with previously published work and present study revels the good agreement with the published work. This study will be helpful in the clinical healing of pathological situations accompanied by accelerated circulation.

Highlights

  • A study has been carried for a viscous, incompressible electrically conducting MHD blood ow with temperature-dependent thermal conductivity and viscosity through a stretching surface in the presence of thermal radiation, viscous dissipation, and chemical reaction

  • The e ects of the physical parameters such as viscosity parameter (μ(Tb)), permeability parameter (β), magnetic eld parameter (M), Local Grashof number (Gr) for thermal di usion, Local modi ed Grashof number for mass di usion (Gm), the Eckert number (Ec), the thermal conductivity parameter (K(Tb)) on the velocity, temperature, concentration pro les, skin-friction coe cient, Nusselt number, and Sherwood number are presented graphically

  • This study reveals that results for wall shear stress (WSS) obtained through boundary layer theory are in good agreement with the results obtained from the Navier stokes equation

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Abstract: A study has been carried for a viscous, incompressible electrically conducting MHD blood ow with temperature-dependent thermal conductivity and viscosity through a stretching surface in the presence of thermal radiation, viscous dissipation, and chemical reaction. The analysis of boundary layer ow over a stretching surface has received so much attention from researchers and scientists due to its wide usage in the chemical, food, petroleum industry etc. It plays a crucial role in the bio-medical eld because there is a signi cant variation in human anatomy, physiology and stenosis. Misra et al.[1] introduce the theory of the formation of boundary layer at the entry section of the vessel wall. A theoretical analysis of wall shear stress (WSS) in the stenosed coronary artery with the help of laminar boundary layer theory has been proposed by Back et al [2]. This study reveals that results for WSS obtained through boundary layer theory are in good agreement with the results obtained from the Navier stokes equation

This work is licensed under the Creative Commons
Mathematical formulation
Numerical solution
Results and discussion
Present study
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.