Oscillatory Magnetohydrodynamic Heat Transfer in Viscous Blood Flow
through the Porous Capillary
Abstract
This investigation explored the many-sided features of mild intensity
movement and an incompressible magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) Poiseuille
stream in a permeable fine cylinder, focusing on the characteristics of
viscous blood. This review investigated the effects of
temperature-subordinate thickness and fluctuating strain inclination on
blood behavior. These discoveries offer little knowledge of advancing
intensity moves and stream qualities in the blood through permeable
small frameworks and are urgently needed for applications in biomedical
and medical service settings. This review presents an extensive
assessment of the overseeing Brinkman equation and energy equation,
unraveling the complicated interaction of factors. By utilizing
Galerkin’s finite element method, exploration has explored the nuanced
connections between boundaries, such as suction/injection, the Darcy
number, the consistency boundary, the Prandtl number, and time.
Remarkably, the outcomes feature the enormous impact of these elements
on the speed and temperature profiles of the blood. The volumetric
stream rate was increased, the suction/injection boundary was decreased,
and the Prandtl number was increased. Additionally, the Nusselt number
increases when the suction/injection boundary and Prandtl number
decrease. These findings coincide with the existing information.