“…On the computational side, numerical techniques are becoming ubiquitous in solving the problems of fluid dynamics. With the development of computational science, the shock structure problem has benefited a lot, especially from the numerical methods of molecular dynamics (Valentini &Schwartzentruber 2009), direct simulation Monte Carlo (DSMC) (Bird 1970(Bird , 1994, direct simulation of the Boltzmann equation (Ohwada 1993;Kosuge, Aoki & Takata 2001), simplified models of the Boltzmann equation such as the Bhatnagar-Gross-Krook (BGK) model (Liepmann, Narasimha & Chahine 1962;Xu & Tang 2004), the discrete velocity model/method (DVM) (Broadwell 1964;Gatignol 1975;Inamuro & Sturtevant 1990;Malkov et al 2015), the classical and modified Navier-Stokes equations (Holian et al 1993;Greenshields & Reese 2007;Uribe & Velasco 2018), the higher-order hydrodynamic equations represented by the Burnett equations (Reese et al 1995;Agarwal, Yun & Balakrishnan 2001;García-Colín, Velasco & Uribe 2008;Bobylev et al 2011;Zhao et al 2014;Jadhav, Gavasane & Agrawal 2021), Grad's moment equations and variants (Torrilhon & Struchtrup 2004;Torrilhon 2016;Cai & Wang 2020;Cai 2021), generalised hydrodynamics (Al-Ghoul & Eu 1997, 2001a, the nonlinear coupled constitutive relations (Jiang et al 2019) and extended thermodynamics (Ruggeri 1996;Taniguchi et al 2014), as well as their hybrid approaches, such as Boltzmann-MC (numerical calculation of the Boltzmann equation with collision integral evaluated by the Monte Carlo method) (Hicks, Yen & Reilly 1972), DVMC (DVM with Monte Carlo evaluations of the collision integral) (Kowalczyk et al 2008;…”