3.9 Article

Analysis of Maxwell bioconvective nanofluids with surface suction and slip conditions in the presence of solar radiations

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICS COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 5, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/2399-6528/ac36b4

Keywords

Maxwell nanofluid; solar radiations; velocity slip; surface suction; numerical solutions

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Researchers have studied potential agents added to nanofluids to increase their thermal conductivity, with the effect of Brownian motion found to significantly enhance this property. The model also shows that sunlight energy can raise the temperature, particularly beneficial for industrial processes, and the stretching property of the sheet contributes to temperature rise.
Several researchers have studied nanofluids over the past several decades and tried to identify potential agents that are added to nanofluids (nanoparticle suspensions) with tremendous thermal conductivity. In such suspensions, the Brownian motion of nanoparticles is the only means expected to be associated with the improved thermal conductivity of nanofluids, and the sections that may add to this are the subject of main conversation and discussion. In the current evaluation, the effect of Brownian motion has been investigated by injecting nanoparticles into the base fluid, and the existing fundamental information is available at creation. Propagation results show that this mixing effect can significantly increase the thermal conductivity of nanofluids. One of the interesting features of this model is that the temperature can be increased by the energy of sunlight, which is required for some industrial processes. The stretching property of the sheet is more conducive to the temperature rise. This model contains features that have not been previously studied, which is driving demand for this model in a variety of industries, now and in future generations.

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