Fluctuating hydrodynamics of reactive liquid mixtures

Fluctuating hydrodynamics (FHD) provides a framework for modeling microscopic fluctuations in a manner consistent with statistical mechanics and nonequilibrium thermodynamics. This paper presents an FHD formulation for isothermal reactive incompressible liquid mixtures with stochastic chemistry. Flu...

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Published inThe Journal of chemical physics Vol. 149; no. 8; pp. 084113 - 84131
Main Authors Kim, Changho, Nonaka, Andy, Bell, John B., Garcia, Alejandro L., Donev, Aleksandar
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Institute of Physics 28.08.2018
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ISSN0021-9606
1089-7690
1089-7690
DOI10.1063/1.5043428

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Summary:Fluctuating hydrodynamics (FHD) provides a framework for modeling microscopic fluctuations in a manner consistent with statistical mechanics and nonequilibrium thermodynamics. This paper presents an FHD formulation for isothermal reactive incompressible liquid mixtures with stochastic chemistry. Fluctuating multispecies mass diffusion is formulated using a Maxwell–Stefan description without assuming a dilute solution, and momentum dynamics is described by a stochastic Navier–Stokes equation for the fluid velocity. We consider a thermodynamically consistent generalization for the law of mass action for non-dilute mixtures and use it in the chemical master equation (CME) to model reactions as a Poisson process. The FHD approach provides remarkable computational efficiency over traditional reaction-diffusion master equation methods when the number of reactive molecules is large, while also retaining accuracy even when there are as few as ten reactive molecules per hydrodynamic cell. We present a numerical algorithm to solve the coupled FHD and CME equations and validate it on both equilibrium and nonequilibrium problems. We simulate a diffusively driven gravitational instability in the presence of an acid-base neutralization reaction, starting from a perfectly flat interface. We demonstrate that the coupling between velocity and concentration fluctuations dominates the initial growth of the instability.
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USDOE
AC02-05CH11231; SC0008271
ISSN:0021-9606
1089-7690
1089-7690
DOI:10.1063/1.5043428