Abstract

This primary goal of this analysis is to investigate how several slips affect the flow, heat, and mass performance of Darcy–Forchheimer unstable behavior beyond a stretching sheet using a numerical analysis of the Soret effect. The novel constitutive model Cattaneo–Christov is illustrated to analyze the features of thermal relaxation time. The Cattaneo–Christov method is used to predict heat and mass transport. A surface that slanders and has varying thicknesses propels the flow. Through the use of local similarity transformations, the governing nonlinear partial differential equations reduce to the coupled ordinary differential equations and include the momentum, energy, and concentration equations. The altered ODEs are calculated numerically using the Runge–Kutta Fehlberg scheme and an efficient shooting procedure. The physical properties of the temperature, concentration, and fluid velocity profiles are shown visually and shed light on the change of several governing parameters. For example, in comparison to the classical Fourier’s heat model, our result suggests that the Cattaneo–Christov heat flux constitution has lower temperature and thermal boundary layer thickness. In the meantime, a high wall thickness parameter greatly upgrades the rate of heat transfer, and thermal relaxation has the opposite effect. Discussion is held regarding the effects of various miscellaneous variables on temperature, concentration, and velocity.

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