Abstract

The Maxwell model of fluid flow in a rotating frame over a porous media is investigated in this paper. Binary chemical reactions and fluid movement under activation energy are both covered in this study. The impact of mass and heat transmission along the boundary layer is investigated in an equilibrium process. Using the method of similarity transformation, the controlling partial differential equations are changed into ordinary differential equations. The results are confirmed using the bvp4c Matlab built-in programme, and the altered equations are resolved utilizing a 4th order Runge Kutta based shooting method. Reversible and irreversible processes, activation energy, chemical reactions, Deborah numbers, and rotation parameters are some of the parameters for which the results are offered in tables and graphs. The prior objective of this study is to examine the impact of activation energy and chemical reactions on Maxwell fluid flow in an equilibrium setting. The concentration boundary layer for reversible flows is significantly finer than that of irreversible flows with the influence of activation energy, chemical reaction, and rotation factors. A reduced boundary layer thickness can improve the rates of heat and mass transmission in tremendous applications, such as exchangers of heat and chemical reactors. In this chemical process, sulphuric acid is utilized as a catalyst along with Maxwell fluid which affects the boundary layer reaction rate and selectivity. This is crucial for efficient catalytic process design. Controlling reaction rates using fluid elasticity and reaction kinetics is useful in operations that need accurate product production.

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