Numerical Analysis Group Research
Report NA-06/14
Existence of global weak solutions to kinetic models for dilute polymers
John W Barrett and
Endre Süli
August 2006, 45 pages
We study the existence of global-in-time weak solutions to a coupled
microscopic-macroscopic bead-spring model which arises from the kinetic
theory of dilute solutions of polymeric liquids with noninteracting
polymer chains. The model consists of the unsteady incompressible
Navier-Stokes equations in a bounded domain in two or three space
dimensions, for the velocity and the pressure of the fluid, with an
elastic extra-stress tensor as right-hand side in the momentum equation.
The extra-stress tensor stems from the random movement of the polymer
chains and is defined through the associated probability density
function which satisfies a Fokker-Planck type parabolic equation, a
crucial feature of which is the presence of a centre-of-mass diffusion
term. The anisotropic Friedrichs mollifiers, which naturally arise in
the course of the derivation of the model in the Kramers expression for
the extra stress tensor and in the drag term in the Fokker-Planck
equation, are replaced by isotropic Friedrichs mollifiers. We establish
the existence of global-in-time weak solutions to the model for a
general class of spring-force-potentials including in particular the
widely used FENE (Finitely Extensible Nonlinear Elastic) potential. We
justify also, through a rigorous limiting process, certain classical
reductions of this model appearing in the literature which exclude the
centre-of-mass diffusion term from the Fokker-Planck equation on the
grounds that the diffusion coefficient is small relative to other
coefficients featuring in the equation. In the case of a corotational
drag term we perform a rigorous passage to the limit as the Friedrichs
mollifiers in the Kramers expression and the drag term converge to
identity operators.
Key words and phrases: Polymeric flow models, existence of weak solutions, Navier-Stokes
equations, Fokker-Planck equations, FENE.
AMS Classification index: 76D03, 82C31, 82D60
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