Optimal distributed control of a 2D simplified ericksen-Leslie system for the nematic liquid crystal flows
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2286786
DOI10.1016/j.nonrwa.2019.103014zbMath1428.76025OpenAlexW2971307754MaRDI QIDQ2286786
Publication date: 22 January 2020
Published in: Nonlinear Analysis. Real World Applications (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nonrwa.2019.103014
Fréchet differentiablenematic liquid crystal flowsoptimal distributed controlfirst-order necessary optimality conditions
Smoothness and regularity of solutions to PDEs (35B65) PDEs in connection with fluid mechanics (35Q35) Liquid crystals (76A15)
Related Items (1)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Optimal boundary control of a simplified Ericksen-Leslie system for nematic liquid crystal flows in \(2D\)
- Global regularity and uniqueness of weak solution for the 2-D liquid crystal flows
- Liquid crystal flows in two dimensions
- Regularity and time-periodicity for a nematic liquid crystal model
- Well-posedness and long term behavior of a simplified Ericksen-Leslie non-autonomous system for nematic liquid crystal flows
- Optimal Distributed Control of a Nonlocal Cahn--Hilliard/Navier--Stokes System in Two Dimensions
- Long-Time Behavior for a Hydrodynamic Model on Nematic Liquid Crystal Flows with Asymptotic Stabilizing Boundary Condition and External Force
- Recent developments of analysis for hydrodynamic flow of nematic liquid crystals
- Global Existence of Weak Solutions of the Nematic Liquid Crystal Flow in Dimension Three
- Nonlinear theory of defects in nematic liquid crystals; Phase transition and flow phenomena
- Sufficient conditions for regularity and uniqueness of a 3D nematic liquid crystal model
- Dynamics for Controlled Navier--Stokes Systems with Distributed Controls
- Nonparabolic dissipative systems modeling the flow of liquid crystals
This page was built for publication: Optimal distributed control of a 2D simplified ericksen-Leslie system for the nematic liquid crystal flows