Finding the bulk viscosity of air from Rayleigh-Brillouin light scattering spectra

D Bruno and A Frezzotti and SH Jamali and W van de Water, JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 158, 031101 (2023).

DOI: 10.1063/5.0136837

Spectral line shape models can successfully reproduce experimental Rayleigh-Brillouin spectra, but they need knowledge about the bulk viscosity eta(b). Light scattering involves GHz frequencies, but since eta(b) is only documented at low frequencies, eta(b) is usually left as a free parameter, which is determined by a fit of the model to an experimental spectrum. The question is whether models work so well because of this freedom. Moreover, for light scattering in air, spectral models view "air " as an effective molecule. We critically evaluate the use of eta(b) as a fit parameter by comparing eta(b) obtained from fits of the Tenti S6 model to the result of Direct Simulation Monte Carlo (DSMC) for a mixture of Nitrogen and Oxygen. These simulations are used to compute light scattering spectra, which are then compared to experiments. The DSMC simulation parameters are cross-checked with a molecular dynamics simulation based on intermolecular potentials. At large values of the uniformity parameter y, y asymptotic to 4, where the Brillouin contribution to spectra is large, fitted eta(b) are 20% larger than the ones from DSMC, while the quality of the simulated spectra is comparable to that of the Tenti S6 line shape model. At smaller y, the difference between fitted and simulated eta(b) can be as large as 100%. We hypothesize the breakdown of the bulk viscosity concept to be the cause of this fallacy.

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