Generalized Fluid Models of the Braginskii Type
P. Hunana, T. Passot, E. Khomenko, D. Martinez-Gomez, M. Collados, A., Tenerani, G. P. Zank, Y. Maneva, M. L. Goldstein, G. M. Webb

TL;DR
This paper generalizes the classical Braginskii fluid model for plasmas using the Landau operator and Grad's moment method, introducing 21- and 22-moment models for multi-species plasmas with detailed transport coefficients.
Contribution
It develops a comprehensive multi-species plasma fluid model with higher-order moments, providing explicit analytic forms of transport coefficients and insights into coupling effects.
Findings
The 21-moment model extends Braginskii's model to multi-species plasmas.
Coupling between heat fluxes and viscosity tensors is significant even linearly.
The 22-moment model accounts for scalar perturbations affecting energy exchange.
Abstract
Several generalizations of the well-known fluid model of Braginskii (Rev. of Plasma Phys., 1965) are considered. We use the Landau collisional operator and the moment method of Grad. We focus on the 21-moment model that is analogous to the Braginskii model, and we also consider a 22-moment model. Both models are formulated for general multi-species plasmas with arbitrary masses and temperatures, where all the fluid moments are described by their evolution equations. The 21-moment model contains two "heat flux vectors" (3rd and 5th-order moments) and two "viscosity-tensors" (2nd and 4th-order moments). The Braginskii model is then obtained as a particular case of a one ion-electron plasma with similar temperatures, with de-coupled heat fluxes and viscosity-tensors expressed in a quasi-static approximation. We provide all the numerical values of the Braginskii model in a fully analytic…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
