School of Physical Sciences (SPS)
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School of Physical Sciences (SPS)
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Item Mathematical Analysis of a Contaminant Flow in a Finite Medium using the Weighted Residual Method(Ilorin Journal of Science, 2015-02-01) JIMOH, OMANANYI RAZAQ; Aiyesimi, Y. M.; Jiya, M.; Bolarin, G. A.In this paper, a Galerkin weighted Residual method is used in providing an analytical solution of two-dimensional contaminant flow problem with non-zero initial concentration. The equation is described by advection, dispersion, adsorption, first order decay and zero-order source. It is assumed that the adsorption term is modeled by Freudlich isotherm. Using Bubnov-Galerkin method, the governing equation was converted to a discrete problem. Thereafter, the approximate solution of the resulting system of initial value problem was obtained. The results obtained are expressed in graphical form to show the effect of change in the parameters on the concentration of the contaminants. From the analysis of the results, it was discovered that the contaminant concentration decreases with increase in the distance from the origin while it increases with increase in the zero-order source coefficient.Item Computational Analysis of a one-dimensional nonlinear reactive contaminant flow with an initial continuous point source by homotopy-perturbation method.(Journal of the Nigerian Association of Mathematical Physics, 2012-11-05) Aiyesimi, Y. M.; JIMOH, OMANANYI RAZAQIn this paper, a Homotopy-perturbation analysis of a non–linear reactive contaminant flow equation with initial continuous point source is provided. The equation is described by advection, diffusion and adsorption. We assume that the adsorption term is modeled by Freudlich Isotherm. We provide an approximation of this equation using homotopy-perturbation transformation and solve the resulting linear equations analytically. The graphs of the concentration against the distance, reaction parameter and time are presented and analyzed to determine the effects of increase in the reaction coefficient, time and distance on the concentration. Findings from this research show that the concentration of the contaminant decreases with time and decreases faster when the value of the reaction parameter α is high.