Abstract:
The main purpose of this thesis is to discuss the fluid flow driven by stretching of the sheet. In
fluid dynamics, there are many mechanisms to drive the fluid flow: like the motion of the
boundaries, the pressure gradient and the buoyancy force. Of these mechanisms, the motion of
the boundaries remains the most important. And among many fluid flows driven by the motion
of the boundaries, the flow induced by stretching of the surface has been of greatest value and
importance. In fact its importance lies in the application of stretching sheets in industry and
engineering. Such flows are generally generated in extrusion of polymers, fibers spinning, hot
rolling, manufacturing of plastic and rubber sheet, continuous casting and glass blowing. The
stretching of the sheets have been initially undertaken in Newtonian fluid and later on extended
to non-Newtonian fluids-- because of their application in polymer industry. The heat transfer
through a fluid in the presence of fluid flow is also a subject of immense importance both for
understanding of fluid flow and its applications in vast areas of industrial problems. Keeping in
view the importance of the flow and heat transfer by stretching sheet a huge amount of work has
been published for linear, power law and exponential stretching of the sheets in Newtonian and
non-Newtonian fluids. However, the bulk of this work describes the flow and heat transfer past a
continuous stretching surface taking linear, polynomial, power law and exponential stretching
velocities and temperature distributions. However, this has always been a challenge for the
scientists and engineers to introduce new stretching velocities for the solutions of non-linear
equations on the one hand and its industrial applications on the other hand.
The present thesis extends the class of stretching problems by introducing a hyperbolic stretching
velocity and temperature distribution on the sheet, for the first time. The appropriate similarity
transformations are introduced to reduce PDEs into ODEs. Arbitrary stretching and non-
Newtonian fluids are also taken into consideration. These investigations will go a step forward in
understanding the fluid flow and heat transfer for so far unaccounted stretching of the sheet and
its possible industrial applications both in Newtonian and non- Newtonian fluids.
The first chapter of this thesis contains the history and literature related to stretching sheet
problems and states the basic definitions and equations to be used in later chapters.
In second chapter we introduce the concept of hyperbolic stretching of the sheet for the first time
in this thesis. The boundary layer flow and heat transfer analysis of an incompressible viscous
ixfluid for a hyperbolically stretching sheet is investigated. The analytical and numerical results are
obtained using series expansion method and Local Non-Similarity (LNS) methods respectively.
Analytical and numerical results for skin friction and Nusselt number are calculated and
compared with each other. The significant observation is that the momentum and thermal
boundary layer thicknesses decrease as the distance from the leading edge increases. The well-
known solution of linear stretching is found as the leading order solution for the hyperbolic
stretching. The contents of this chapter have been published in Applied Mathematics and
Mechanics (English Edition), 33(4), 445–454 (2012).
Flow and heat transfer of an electrically conducting viscous fluid over a hyperbolic stretching
sheet with viscous dissipation and internal heat generation is investigated in third chapter. The
suitable transformations reduce the governing equations in a tractable form for the analytical and
numerical solutions. The same analytical and numerical methods, as in chapter two, are used to
obtain the results. The essence of this paper is to examine the effects of viscous dissipation,
magnetic field and heat generation in a recent paper of hyperbolic stretching sheet presented in
last chapter. This work has been submitted in International Journal of Numerical Methods for
Heat and Fluid Flow for publication.
Fourth chapter deals with the study of mixed convection flow and heat transfer of a viscous fluid
along a vertical hyperbolic stretching wall. The results have been obtained considering the effect
of heat generation/absorption. The solutions for forced convection flow over a linear stretching
surface with linear temperature distribution in the presence of heat source/sink are found to be
the leading order solutions of mixed convection past a hyperbolic stretching wall.
In next chapter, the boundary layer flow and heat transfer analysis of an incompressible
nanofluid for a hyperbolically stretching sheet is presented. The model used considers the effects
of Brownian diffusion and the thermophoresis. Analytical and numerical results for skin friction,
Nusselt number and Sharwood number are calculated and compared with each other. The effects
of different physical parameter on velocity, temperature and concentration of nanoparticles are
also analyzed. The leading order solution of this problem represents the flow, heat and mass
transfer of an incompressible viscous fluid over a linearly stretching surface.
The boundary layer flow of second grade fluid over a permeable stretching surface with arbitrary
velocity and appropriate wall transpiration is investigated in fifth chapter. The fluid is electrically
conducting in the presence of constant applied magnetic field. Exact solution to the nonlinear
xflow problem is presented. The contents of this chapter are published in Applied Mathematical
Letters, 24 (2011), 1905–1909.
The last chapter presents an exact analytical solution of magneto hydrodynamic (MHD) viscous
flow over a permeable sheet with partial slip boundary conditions. The flow is induced by an
arbitrary stretching of the surface. The exact analytical solution of the problem becomes possible
by taking an appropriate wall transpiration velocity. An existing solution for flow generated by
arbitrary stretching surface with no slip condition class of the exact solutions of the Navier
Stokes equations for stretching surface.