Understanding Diffusion: Steady State and Boundary Conditions Explained

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around a diffusion problem involving a source of particles in a box with specific boundary conditions. Participants explore the implications of steady state conditions, mass flux, and the interpretation of density at the boundaries, focusing on theoretical aspects of diffusion and its mathematical representation.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Mathematical reasoning
  • Technical explanation

Main Points Raised

  • One participant questions how a steady state can exist with mass leaving the box while the mass flux at the boundaries is zero.
  • Another participant challenges the assertion that mass is leaving the box, asking for clarification on the source of that information.
  • A different viewpoint suggests that the presence of a source inside the box implies mass is being created or injected, which is necessary for a steady state.
  • Some participants clarify that in diffusion problems, a source typically refers to a point from which particles diffuse, rather than a continuous injection of mass.
  • There is a discussion about the implications of density being zero at the boundaries and whether that affects the slope of the density curve, which relates to mass flux.
  • One participant asserts that mass flux is determined by the density value, not its derivative, while another argues that the mass flux must be considered in the context of the entire closed surface of the box.
  • Another participant mentions that Fick's law does not inherently assume steady state, but steady state can be achieved by setting time derivatives to zero.
  • There is a suggestion that to maintain zero density at the outer edge of the box, the outward velocity must increase significantly, leading to a nonzero flux just inside and outside the box.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing interpretations of the diffusion problem, particularly regarding the nature of the source and the implications of boundary conditions. No consensus is reached on the correct interpretation of mass flux and its relationship to steady state conditions.

Contextual Notes

Participants highlight the importance of boundary conditions and the assumptions made in applying Fick's laws. The discussion reveals complexities in defining mass flow and density in the context of diffusion, with various interpretations affecting the conclusions drawn.

mordechai9
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Something has been bothering me recently regarding a diffusion problem. Consider a source of particles in a box, diffusing outwards. Set the boundary conditions so that the density is zero at the edge of the box.

We can solve this problem in "steady state" and we find essentially a parabolic (or x^2) dependence of the density inside the box, dropping away from the source. However, since the density is zero at the boundaries of the box, the mass flux there is zero (rho*v*A). What's going on here? How can we have a steady state problem with mass clearly leaving the box without any mass flow actually going out of the box?

Does this simply mean that the mass interpretation is incorrect for this example?
 
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mordechai9 said:
Something has been bothering me recently regarding a diffusion problem. Consider a source of particles in a box, diffusing outwards. Set the boundary conditions so that the density is zero at the edge of the box.

We can solve this problem in "steady state" and we find essentially a parabolic (or x^2) dependence of the density inside the box, dropping away from the source. However, since the density is zero at the boundaries of the box, the mass flux there is zero (rho*v*A). What's going on here? How can we have a steady state problem with mass clearly leaving the box without any mass flow actually going out of the box?

Does this simply mean that the mass interpretation is incorrect for this example?

I don't see any evidence that mass is "clearly leaving the box" from what you've said here. Would you extrapolate on where this information comes from? You said the flux there is zero, so nothing is passing through the boundaries.
 
Ah, well, you have a "source" inside the box. Thus mass is being created (or injected) into the box, and unless it's flowing out, you couldn't have a steady state problem.
 
mordechai9 said:
Ah, well, you have a "source" inside the box. Thus mass is being created (or injected) into the box, and unless it's flowing out, you couldn't have a steady state problem.

In diffusion problems, I always took source to mean where the material is all contained, dense to a point in the box. Not that material is actually being injected into the box, just that that's the point the atoms are diffusing from.

So if I spray perfume in one corner of the room and then leave the room and close the door, the place where I sprayed the perfume is the source. No additional perfume is being injected, it's just diffusing from that point until it is evenly distributed throughout the room.
 
Right, well, that can't be steady state though -- the perfume would just diffuse to fill the room, and then you wouldn't have a source term in the equation any more. The source term has to act like a steady input of material for this problem to be steady state.
 
mordechai9 said:
However, since the density is zero at the boundaries of the box, the mass flux there is zero (rho*v*A).

Whoa! Just because some curve has a value of zero at some point doesn't mean its slope is also zero (and the slope corresponds to the magnitude of flux).
 
No... this is incorrect. The mass flux is given by rho*V*A, and it is the value of the density (rho) that shows up, not the derivative (d(rho)/dx).
 
I believe you're using Fick's First Law, which assumes steady-state:

f5b7bf8f1da6d8184514659ee8ba07b1.png


So yeah, you're saying that phi (in this equation) is zero, but that doesn't mean that d(phi)/dx is. You have to solve the differential equation for phi still and get it out of that differential form. Then you can apply your boundary conditions.
 
mordechai9 said:
No... this is incorrect. The mass flux is given by rho*V*A, and it is the value of the density (rho) that shows up, not the derivative (d(rho)/dx).

The mass flux into any infinitesimal element is [itex]\rho AV[/itex], but the mass flux out is [itex]\rho AV+\frac{\partial}{\partial x}(\rho AV)dx[/itex]. [itex]\rho[/itex] is not uniform. Even though it is zero at the boundary, it is nonzero an infinitesimal distance away, and thus the mass flux is nonzero. Does this make sense?
 
  • #10
Pythagorean - Fick's law doesn't assume steady state... You get steady state just by assuming all time derivatives are equal to zero.

Mapes - Actually, the mass flow out is just [tex]\int \rho V \cdot da[/tex], where you integrate over the surface of the box. We're not talking about the flow into and out of a differential element, we're talking about the flow into/out of a closed surface, and that's all. If rho is zero at the boundary, you don't have flow in or out, end of story.
 
  • #11
mordechai9 said:
Pythagorean - Fick's law doesn't assume steady state... You get steady state just by assuming all time derivatives are equal to zero.

Mapes - Actually, the mass flow out is just [tex]\int \rho V \cdot da[/tex], where you integrate over the surface of the box. We're not talking about the flow into and out of a differential element, we're talking about the flow into/out of a closed surface, and that's all. If rho is zero at the boundary, you don't have flow in or out, end of story.

So when you ignore our interpretation and use your own interpretation, you find a paradox, as you pointed out in your first post. What does that tell you?

EDIT: Or, looking at it another way, what does the outward velocity need to be outside the box to maintain the density of particles at the outer edge of the box at zero? To get arbitrarily close to zero density, the velocity needs to grow very large. The product is nonzero. The flux just inside and just outside the box is equal and nonzero.
 
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