Molecular Dynamics Study of the Sonic Horizon of Microscopic Laval Nozzles
Helmut Ortmayer, Robert E. Zillich

TL;DR
This study uses molecular dynamics simulations to explore how microscopic Laval nozzles accelerate and cool gases, revealing that they behave similarly to macroscopic nozzles and exhibit a well-defined sonic horizon.
Contribution
It demonstrates that microscopic Laval nozzles can produce supersonic flows with a sonic horizon, extending macroscopic nozzle behavior to microscopic scales using detailed simulations.
Findings
Microscopic nozzles accelerate gases to supersonic speeds.
Temperature remains well-defined but anisotropic in small nozzles.
A sonic horizon exists and is similar to macroscopic cases.
Abstract
A Laval nozzle can accelerate expanding gas above supersonic velocities, while cooling the gas in the process. This work investigates this process for microscopic Laval nozzles by means of non-equilibrium molecular dynamics simulations of statioary flow, using grand canonical Monte-Carlo particle reservoirs. We study the expansion of a simple fluid, a mono-atomic gas interacting via a Lennard-Jones potential, through an idealized nozzle with atomically smooth walls. We obtain the thermodynamic state variables pressure, density, and temperature, but also the Knudsen number, speed of sound, velocity, and the corresponing Mach number of the expanding gas for nozzles of different sizes. We find that the temperature is well-defined in the sense that the each velocity components of the particles obey the Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution, but it is anisotropic, especially for small nozzles. The…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsGas Dynamics and Kinetic Theory · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories · Phase Equilibria and Thermodynamics
