Transport Coefficients Determined Using the Shielded Coulomb Potential
- 1 January 1959
- journal article
- Published by AIP Publishing in Physics of Fluids
- Vol. 2 (1) , 40-46
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1724389
Abstract
In the classical Chapman‐Enskog theory of a fully ionized gas, the transport coefficients evolve as functionals of certain weighted total scattering cross sections. If a Coulomb potential is assumed between scattering particles, these scattering integrals diverge. A common procedure to circumvent this difficulty is to integrate the Coulomb results up to the Debye cutoff. A more appropriate procedure involves the use of the shielded Coulomb potential, in which case the scattering integrals converge, and there is no need to introduce a cutoff. These integrals are calculated using the shielded Coulomb potential and the resultant transport coefficients are compared with those of the standard ``Coulomb plus Debye cutoff'' calculations. To the ``dominant log term'' the two procedures give identical results. To terms of the next order of accuracy for the viscosity and thermal conductivity the difference between the two formulations is of the order of 0.5%, and for the diffusion and electrical conductivity the difference is of the order of 2%. The major calculation is that of the classical cross section for the screened Coulomb potential.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Plasma Diffusion in a Magnetic FieldPhysical Review B, 1958
- A Collective Description of Electron Interactions: II. CollectiveIndividual Particle Aspects of the InteractionsPhysical Review B, 1952
- The Electrical Conductivity of an Ionized GasPhysical Review B, 1950
- Transport Phenomena in a Completely Ionized Gas in Presence of a Magnetic FieldPhysical Review B, 1949
- THE RADIATIVE AND CONDUCTIVE OPACITIES UNDER WHITE DWARF CONDITIONSAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1941