34 research outputs found
Large-time behavior of a two-scale semilinear reaction-diffusion system for concrete sulfatation
We study the large-time behavior of (weak) solutions to a two-scale
reaction-diffusion system coupled with a nonlinear ordinary differential
equations modeling the partly dissipative corrosion of concrete (/cement)-based
materials with sulfates. We prove that as the solution to the
original two-scale system converges to the corresponding two-scale stationary
system. To obtain the main result we make use essentially of the theory of
evolution equations governed by subdifferential operators of time-dependent
convex functions developed combined with a series of two-scale energy-like
time-independent estimates.Comment: 20 page
Large-time asymptotics of moving-reaction interfaces involving nonlinear Henry's law and time-dependent Dirichlet data
We study the large-time behavior of the free boundary position capturing the
one-dimensional motion of the carbonation reaction front in concrete-based
materials. We extend here our rigorous justification of the -behavior
of reaction penetration depths by including non-linear effects due to
deviations from the classical Henry's law and time-dependent Dirichlet data.Comment: 19 page
Distributed space scales in a semilinear reaction-diffusion system including a parabolic variational inequality: A well-posedness study
This paper treats the solvability of a semilinear reaction-diffusion system,
which incorporates transport (diffusion) and reaction effects emerging from two
separated spatial scales:
- macro and - micro. The system's origin connects to the modeling of
concrete corrosion in sewer concrete pipes. It consists of three partial
differential equations which are mass-balances of concentrations, as well as,
one ordinary differential equation tracking the damage-by-corrosion. The system
is semilinear, partially dissipative, and coupled via the solid-water interface
at the microstructure (pore) level. The structure of the model equations is
obtained in \cite{tasnim1} by upscaling of the physical and chemical processes
taking place within the microstructure of the concrete. Herein we ensure the
positivity and bounds on concentrations, and then prove the
global-in-time existence and uniqueness of a suitable class of positive and
bounded solutions that are stable with respect to the two-scale data and model
parameters. The main ingredient to prove existence include fixed-point
arguments and convergent two-scale Galerkin approximations.Comment: 24 pages, 1 figur
A thermo-diffusion system with Smoluchowski interactions: well-posedness and homogenization
We study the solvability and homogenization of a thermal-diffusion reaction
problem posed in a periodically perforated domain. The system describes the
motion of populations of hot colloidal particles interacting together via
Smoluchowski production terms. The upscaled system, obtained via two-scale
convergence techniques, allows the investigation of deposition effects in
porous materials in the presence of thermal gradients
A free-boundary problem for concrete carbonation: Rigorous justification of the -law of propagation
We study a one-dimensional free-boundary problem describing the penetration
of carbonation fronts (free reaction-triggered interfaces) in concrete. A
couple of decades ago, it was observed experimentally that the penetration
depth versus time curve (say vs. ) behaves like for
sufficiently large times (with a positive constant). Consequently,
many fitting arguments solely based on this experimental law were used to
predict the large-time behavior of carbonation fronts in real structures, a
theoretical justification of the -law being lacking until now. %This
is the place where our paper contributes:
The aim of this paper is to fill this gap by justifying rigorously the
experimentally guessed asymptotic behavior. We have previously proven the upper
bound for some constant ; now we show the optimality
of the rate by proving the right nontrivial lower estimate, i.e. there exists
such that . Additionally, we obtain weak solutions
to the free-boundary problem for the case when the measure of the initial
domain vanishes. In this way, our mathematical model is now allowing for the
appearance of a moving carbonation front -- a scenario that until was hard to
handle from the analysis point of view.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figure
A Class of Initial-Boundary Value Problems Governed by Pseudo-Parabolic Weighted Total Variation Flows
In this paper, we consider a class of initial-boundary value problems
governed by pseudo-parabolic total variation flows. The principal
characteristic of our problem lies in the velocity term of the diffusion flux,
a feature that can bring about stronger regularity than what is found in
standard parabolic PDEs. Meanwhile, our total variation flow contains singular
diffusion, and this singularity may lead to a degeneration of the regularity of
solution. The objective of this paper is to clarify the power balance between
these conflicting effects. Consequently, we will present mathematical results
concerning the well-posedness and regularity of the solution in the Main
Theorems of this paper.Comment: 31 page