The extended gas-kinetic theory from Pullin equation: the relaxation rates, transport coefficients and model equation
Sha Liu, Ningchao Ding, Ming Fang, Hao Jin, Rui Zhang, Congshan Zhuo, Chengwen Zhong

TL;DR
This paper develops an extended gas-kinetic theory using the Pullin equation, providing explicit relaxation rates, transport coefficients, and a new relaxation model for polyatomic gases, improving near-continuum flow predictions.
Contribution
It introduces an integrable collision kernel-based analysis, deriving explicit relaxation rates and transport coefficients, and proposes a novel Rykov-type relaxation model for better accuracy.
Findings
Derived explicit relaxation rates for stress, temperatures, and heat fluxes.
Confirmed that thermal conductivity depends on thermal non-equilibrium.
Validated the new relaxation model against benchmark tests.
Abstract
The Borgnakke-Larsen model, widely used in rarefied flow predictions, serves as the mainstream energy-exchange kernel for polyatomic gases. However, it lacks integrability and does not guarantee detailed balance, limiting theoretical foundations for near-continuum relaxation mechanisms, transport coefficients, and relaxation model equations. In this work, we adopt the Pullin equation, which possesses an integrable collision kernel and satisfies detailed balance, to analyze near-continuum relaxation. Considering only translational and rotational degrees, we obtain explicit analytical expressions for the relaxation rates of macroscopic variables including stress, temperatures, and heat fluxes by approximating the distribution function in mixed Hermite and Laguerre spaces. Based on the same elementary moments, we derive transport coefficients via Chapman-Enskog expansion, rigorously…
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