sented in Ref. ( 5) was restricted to a monatomic gas and Kinetic-theory analytical results are presented concerning the for completely diffuse reflection of atoms at the particle effect of intense evaporation on the thermophoretic force acting surface. The present paper intends to extend the previo
Thermophoretic Velocity of a Small Nonevaporating or Evaporating Particle in a High-Temperature Diatomic Gas
โ Scribed by Xi Chen
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 143 KB
- Volume
- 213
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9797
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โฆ Synopsis
Kinetic-theory analytical results concerning the thermophoretic velocity of a spherical nonevaporating or evaporating particle suspended in a high-temperature diatomic gas with appreciable dissociation degree (e.g., for oxygen with temperatures greater than 3000 K or for nitrogen with temperatures greater than 5500 K) are presented for the free-molecule regime. Molecular dissociation in the bulk gas and atomic recombination at the surface of the cold particle are included in the analysis. It is shown that the thermophoretic velocity of the suspended particle is directly proportional to the temperature gradient and approximately inversely proportional to the gas pressure. The thermophoretic velocities of both nonevaporating and evaporating particles are independent of the particle radius and increase slightly with increase in the specularreflection fraction. For a nonevaporating particle, the thermophoretic velocity almost does not depend on the recombination fraction of atoms at the particle surface. For an intensely evaporating particle, the thermophoretic velocity (U TV ) increases with increasing thermal accommodation factor (a) and decreases with increasing atomic recombination fraction (โฃ) at high gas temperatures with appreciable molecular dissociation, while U TV almost does not depend on a and โฃ at low gas temperatures.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
present analysis. A similar study but for the particle thermo-Kinetic-theory analytical results are presented concerning the phoresis was conducted in a previous paper (6). As meneffect of intense evaporation on the drag force acting on a spherical tioned before ( 6), the research results presented