Kinetic theory of polydisperse granular mixtures: influence of the partial temperatures on transport properties. A review
Mois\'es Garc\'ia Chamorro, Rub\'en G\'omez Gonz\'alez, and Vicente, Garz\'o

TL;DR
This review discusses how partial temperatures influence transport properties in polydisperse granular mixtures, emphasizing the effects of energy nonequipartition caused by inelastic collisions and flow divergence, supported by analytical and simulation comparisons.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the impact of partial temperature differences on granular mixture transport properties, highlighting the significance of energy nonequipartition effects.
Findings
Energy nonequipartition significantly affects thermal diffusion segregation.
Flow velocity divergence influences bulk viscosity.
Analytical results align well with simulations, validating kinetic theory.
Abstract
It is well-recognized that granular media under rapid flow conditions can be modeled as a gas of hard spheres with inelastic collisions. At moderate densities, a fundamental basis for the determination of the granular hydrodynamics is provided by the Enskog kinetic equation conveniently adapted to account for inelastic collisions. A surprising result (compared to its molecular gas counterpart) for granular mixtures is the failure of the energy equipartition, even in homogeneous states. This means that the partial temperatures (measuring the mean kinetic energy of each species) are different to the (total) granular temperature . The goal of this paper is to provide an overview on the effect of different partial temperatures on the transport properties of the mixture. Our analysis addresses first the impact of energy nonequipartition on transport which is only due to the…
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