Transport equation evaluation of coupled continuous time random walks (Q616246)

From MaRDI portal





scientific article; zbMATH DE number 5833857
Language Label Description Also known as
default for all languages
No label defined
    English
    Transport equation evaluation of coupled continuous time random walks
    scientific article; zbMATH DE number 5833857

      Statements

      Transport equation evaluation of coupled continuous time random walks (English)
      0 references
      0 references
      0 references
      0 references
      7 January 2011
      0 references
      The transport behavior of a migrating particle in a disordered medium is exhibited in the solution of a transport equation derived from a coupled continuous time random walk (CTRW). A core aspect of CTRW is the spectrum of transitions in displacement \textbf{s} and t, \(\psi({\mathbf s},t)\), that characterizes the disordered system. In many applications the CTRW approach has successfully accounted for the anomalous or non-Fickian nature of the particle plume propagation based on a power-law dependence \(\psi(t)\) in a decoupled \(p({\mathbf s})\psi(t)\) approximation to \(\psi({\mathbf s},t)\). For example, this power law dependence in \(t\) derives from the complex Darcy flow fields in geological formations. Recently, the fully coupled CTRW was analyzed using a particle tracking approach, demonstrating that the decoupled approximation is valid only for a compact distribution of \(s\). \noindent In this paper, the nonlocal-in-time integro-differential transport equation is solved with a \(\psi({\mathbf s},t)\) containing a power-law dependence in both \(s\) (a Lévy-like distribution) and t, which necessitates the strong \textbf{s}, \(t\) coupling. The authors obtain enhanced transport behavior (relative to the plume propagation behavior reported in the literature) that derives from the rare large displacements in \(s\) (limited by the transition in \(t\)). The interplay between the two coupled power laws is clearly shown in the changes in the breakthrough curves in the arrival times, dispersion and dependence on the velocity \(({\mathbf v}={\mathbf s}/t)\) distribution. Similar enhancements are exhibited in the particle tracking results.
      0 references
      transport theory
      0 references
      anomalous transport
      0 references
      non-Fickian transport
      0 references
      random walks
      0 references
      disordered media
      0 references

      Identifiers