Research Article
Nonlinear equilibrium solutions for the channel flow of fluid with temperature-dependent viscosity
- D. P. WALL, M. NAGATA
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 10 March 2000, pp. 1-26
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The nonlinear stability of the channel flow of fluid with temperature-dependent viscosity is considered for the case of vanishing Péclet number for two viscosity models, μ(T), which vary monotonically with temperature, T. In each case the basic state is found to lose stability from the linear critical point in a subcritical Hopf bifurcation. We find two-dimensional nonlinear time-periodic flows that arise from these bifurcations. The disturbance to the basic flow has wavy streamlines meandering between a sequence of triangular-shaped vortices, with this pattern skewing towards the channel wall which the basic flow skews towards. For each of these secondary flows we identify a nonlinear critical Reynolds number (based on half-channel width and viscosity at one of the fixed wall temperatures) which represents the minimum Reynolds number at which a secondary flow may exist. In contrast to the results for the linear critical Reynolds number, the precise form of μ(T) is not found to be qualitatively important in determining the stability of the thermal flow relative to the isothermal flow. For the viscosity models considered here, we find that the secondary flow is destabilized relative to the corresponding isothermal flow when μ(T) decreases and vice versa. However, if we remove the bulk effect of the non-uniform change in viscosity by introducing a Reynolds number based on average viscosity, it is found that the form of μ(T) is important in determining whether the thermal secondary flow is stabilized or destabilized relative to the corresponding isothermal flow. We also consider the linear stability of the secondary flows and find that the most unstable modes are either superharmonic or subharmonic. All secondary disturbance modes are ultimately damped as the Floquet parameter in the spanwise direction increases, and the last mode to be damped is always a phase-locked subharmonic mode. None of the secondary flows is found to be stable to all secondary disturbance modes. Possible bifurcation points for tertiary flows are also identified.
V-waves, bow shocks, and wakes in supercritical hydrostatic flow
- QINGFANG JIANG, RONALD B. SMITH
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- 10 March 2000, pp. 27-53
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The structure of the bow shock, V-wave, and the related wave drag and wake in supercritical ambient flow are investigated for homogeneous hydrostatic single-layer flow with a free surface over an isolated two-dimensional (i.e. h(x, y)) obstacle. The two control parameters for this physical system are the ratio of obstacle height to fluid depth and the Froude number F = U/√gH. Based on theoretical analysis and numerical modelling, a steady-state regime diagram is constructed for supercritical flow. This study suggests that supercritical flow may have an upstream bow shock with a transition from the supercritical state to the subcritical state near the centreline, and a V-shock in the lee without a state transition. Unlike subcritical flow, neither a flank shock nor a normal lee shock is observed, due to the local supercritical environment. Both the bow shock and V-shock are dissipative and reduce the Bernoulli constant, but the vorticity generation is very weak in comparison with subcritical ambient flow. Thus, in supercritical flow, wakes are weak and eddy shedding is absent.
Formulae for V-wave shape and V-wave drag are given using linear theory. Both formulae compare well with numerical model runs for small obstacles.
These results can be applied to air flow over mountains, river hydraulics and coastal ocean currents with bottom topographies.
Aerosol particle transport and deposition in vertical and horizontal turbulent duct flows
- HAIFENG ZHANG, GOODARZ AHMADI
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- 10 March 2000, pp. 55-80
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Aerosol particle transport and deposition in vertical and horizontal turbulent duct flows in the presence of different gravity directions are studied. The instantaneous fluid velocity field is generated by the direct numerical simulation of the Navier–Stokes equation via a pseudospectral method. A particle equation of motion including Stokes drag, Brownian diffusion, lift and gravitational forces is used for trajectory analysis. Ensembles of 8192 particle paths are evaluated, compiled, and statistically analysed. The results show that the wall coherent structure plays an important role in the particle deposition process. The simulated deposition velocities under various conditions are compared with the available experimental data and the sublayer model predictions. It is shown that the shear velocity, density ratio, the shear-induced lift force and the flow direction affect the particle deposition rate. The results for vertical ducts show that the particle deposition velocity varies with the direction of gravity, and the effect becomes more significant when the shear velocity is small. For horizontal ducts, the gravitational sedimentation increases the particle deposition rate on the lower wall.
Reynolds number dependence of the small-scale structure of grid turbulence
- T. ZHOU, R. A. ANTONIA
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- 10 March 2000, pp. 81-107
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The small-scale structure of grid turbulence is studied primarily using data obtained with a transverse vorticity (ω3) probe for values of the Taylor-microscale Reynolds number Rλ in the range 27–100. The measured spectra of the transverse vorticity component agree within ±10% with those calculated using the isotropic relation over nearly all wavenumbers. Scaling-range exponents of transverse velocity increments are appreciably smaller than exponents of longitudinal velocity increments. Only a small fraction of this difference can be attributed to the difference in intermittency between the locally averaged energy dissipation rate and enstrophy fluctuations. The anisotropy of turbulence structures in the scaling range, which reflects the small values of Rλ, is more likely to account for most of the difference. All four fourth-order rotational invariants Iα (α = 1 to 4) proposed by Siggia (1981) were evaluated. For any particular value of α, the magnitude of the ratio Iα / I1 is approximately constant, independently of Rλ. The implication is that the invariants are interdependent, at least in isotropic and quasi-Gaussian turbulence, so that only one power-law exponent may be sufficient to describe the Rλ dependence of all fourth-order velocity derivative moments in this type of flow. This contrasts with previous suggestions that at least two power-law exponents are needed, one for the rate of strain and the other for vorticity.
Interscale transfer in two-dimensional compact vortices
- GIANNI PEDRIZZETTI, J. C. VASSILICOS
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- 10 March 2000, pp. 109-129
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The property of transfer between different scales of motion in evolving two-dimensional compact vortices is studied here, and a general mathematical framework is developed to describe the transfer between scales inside compact structures. This new approach is applied to the case of an axisymmetric advection which represents the leading-order (large time) approximation for Lundgren's family of two-dimensional vortices. It is also generalized to passive scalar advection by non-axisymmetric velocity fields. It is shown that scale interactions generated by an axisymmetric advection are essentially local and dominated by distant triadic interactions: in the case of an evolving spiral vortex sheet this result is confirmed even when non-axisymmetric corrections are included. A physical interpretation of the results is given, which can be summarized by saying that locality of scale interactions is caused by the uniformity of shear at a given scale and is therefore increasingly natural at small lengthscales. Local interactions are shown to arise in axisymmetric advection but to be uncommon in non-axisymmetric advection.
Nonlinear equilibrium solutions in a three-dimensional boundary layer and their secondary instability
- WERNER KOCH, FABIO P. BERTOLOTTI, ANDREAS STOLTE, STEFAN HEIN
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- 10 March 2000, pp. 131-174
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The observed nonlinear saturation of crossflow vortices in the DLR swept-plate transition experiment, followed by the onset of high-frequency signals, motivated us to compute nonlinear equilibrium solutions for this flow and investigate their instability to high-frequency disturbances. The equilibrium solutions are independent of receptivity, i.e. the way crossflow vortices are generated, and thus provide a unique characterization of the nonlinear flow prior to turbulence. Comparisons of these equilibrium solutions with experimental measurements exhibit strong similarities. Additional comparisons with results from the nonlinear parabolized stability equations (PSE) and spatial direct numerical simulations (DNS) reveal that the equilibrium solutions become unstable to steady, spatial oscillations with very long wavelengths following a bifurcation close to the leading edge. Such spatially oscillating solutions have been observed also in critical layer theory computations. The nature of the spatial behaviour is herein clarified and shown to be analogous to that encountered in temporal direct numerical simulations. We then employ Floquet theory to systematically study the dependence of the secondary, high-frequency instabilities on the saturation amplitude of the equilibrium solutions. With increasing amplitude, the most amplified instability mode can be clearly traced to spanwise inflectional shear layers that occur in the wake-like portions of the equilibrium solutions (Malik et al. 1994 call it ‘mode I’ instability). Both the frequency range and the eigenfunctions resemble recent experimental measurements of Kawakami et al. (1999). However, the lack of an explosive growth leads us to believe that additional self-sustaining processes are active at transition, including the possibility of an absolute instability of the high-frequency disturbances.
Non-axisymmetric vortices in two-dimensional flows
- STÉPHANE LE DIZÈS
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- 10 March 2000, pp. 175-198
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Slightly non-axisymmetric vortices are analysed by asymptotic methods in the context of incompressible large-Reynolds-number two-dimensional flows. The structure of the non-axisymmetric correction generated by an external rotating multipolar strain field to a vortex with a Gaussian vorticity profile is first studied. It is shown that when the angular frequency w of the external field is in the range of the angular velocity of the vortex, the non-axisymmetric correction exhibits a critical-point singularity which requires the introduction of viscosity or nonlinearity to be smoothed. The nature of the critical layer, which depends on the parameter h = 1/(Re ε3/2), where ε is the amplitude of the non-axisymmetric correction and Re the Reynolds number based on the circulation of the vortex, is found to govern the entire structure of the correction. Numerous properties are analysed as w and h vary for a multipolar strain field of order n = 2, 3, 4 and 5. In the second part of the paper, the problem of the existence of a non-axisymmetric correction which can survive without external field due to the presence of a nonlinear critical layer is addressed. For a family of vorticity profiles ranging from Gaussian to top-hat, such a correction is shown to exist for particular values of the angular frequency. The resulting non-axisymmetric vortices are analysed in detail and compared to recent computations by Rossi, Lingevitch & Bernoff (1997) and Dritschel (1998) of non-axisymmetric vortices. The results are also discussed in the context of electron columns where similar non-axisymmetric structures were observed (Driscoll & Fine 1990).
The anomalous motion of superfluid helium in a rotating cavity
- KAREN L. HENDERSON, CARLO F. BARENGHI
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- 10 March 2000, pp. 199-219
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We numerically solve the nonlinear two-fluid Hall–Vinen–Bekharevich–Khalatnikov (HVBK) equations for superfluid helium confined inside a short Couette annulus. The outer cylinder and the ends of the annulus are held fixed whilst the inner cylinder is rotated. This simple flow configuration allows us to study how the vortex lines respond to a shear in the presence of boundaries. It also allows us to investigate further the boundary conditions associated with the HVBK model. The main result of our investigation is the anomalous motion of helium II when compared to a classical fluid. The superfluid Ekman cells always rotate in the opposite sense to a classical Navier–Stokes fluid due to the mutual friction between the two fluids, whilst the sense of rotation of the normal fluid Ekman cells depends on the parameter range considered. We also find that the tension of the vortex lines forces the superfluid to rotate about the inner cylinder almost like a rigid column.
Wavefields forced by long obstacles on a beta-plane
- M. A. PAGE, E. R. JOHNSON
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- 10 March 2000, pp. 221-245
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This paper presents analytical and numerical solutions for steady flow past long obstacles on a β-plane. In the oceanographically-relevant limit of small Rossby and Ekman numbers nonlinear advection remains important but viscosity appears only through the influence of Ekman pumping. A reduced boundary-layer-type equation is derived giving the long-obstacle limit of an equation described in Page & Johnson (1990). Analytical solutions are presented or described in various asymptotic limits of this equation and compared with previous results for this or related flows. A novel technique for the numerical solution of the boundary-layer equation, based on a downstream–upstream iteration procedure, is described. Some modifications of the asymptotic layer structure described in Page & Johnson (1991) and Johnson & Page (1993) for the weakly nonlinear low-friction regime are outlined for the case of a lenticular obstacle.
Turbulent transport of momentum and heat in magnetohydrodynamic rectangular duct flow with strong sidewall jets
- ULRICH BURR, L. BARLEON, U. MÜLLER, A. TSINOBER
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- 10 March 2000, pp. 247-279
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This paper presents an experimental study of the momentum and heat transport in a turbulent magnetohydrodynamic duct flow with strong wall jets at the walls parallel to the magnetic field. Local turbulent flow quantities are measured by a traversable combined temperature-potential-difference probe. The simultaneous measurements of time-dependent velocity and temperature signals facilitates the evaluation of Reynolds stresses and turbulent heat fluxes. Integral quantities such as pressure drop and temperature at the heated wall are evaluated and compared with results from conservative design correlations. At strong enough magnetic fields the destabilizing effect of strong shear generated at the sidewalls wins the competition with the damping effect by Joule's dissipation and turbulent side layers are created. Due to the strong non-isotropic character of the electromagnetic forces, the turbulence structure is characterized by large-scale two-dimensional vortices with their axis aligned in the direction of the magnetic field. As most of the turbulent kinetic energy is concentrated in the near-wall turbulent side layers, the temperatures at the heated wall are governed by the development of the thermal boundary layer in the turbulent flow.
Nonlinear instability of plane liquid sheets
- SEYED A. JAZAYERI, XIANGUO LI
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- 10 March 2000, pp. 281-308
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A nonlinear stability analysis has been carried out for plane liquid sheets moving in a gas medium at rest by a perturbation expansion technique with the initial amplitude of the disturbance as the perturbation parameter. The first, second and third order governing equations have been derived along with appropriate initial and boundary conditions which describe the characteristics of the fundamental, and the first and second harmonics. The results indicate that for an initially sinusoidal sinuous surface disturbance, the thinning and subsequent breakup of the liquid sheet is due to nonlinear effects with the generation of higher harmonics as well as feedback into the fundamental. In particular, the first harmonic of the fundamental sinuous mode is varicose, which causes the eventual breakup of the liquid sheet at the half-wavelength interval of the fundamental wave. The breakup time (or length) of the liquid sheet is calculated, and the effect of the various flow parameters is investigated. It is found that the breakup time (or length) is reduced by an increase in the initial amplitude of disturbance, the Weber number and the gas-to-liquid density ratio, and it becomes asymptotically insensitive to the variations of the Weber number and the density ratio when their values become very large. It is also found that the breakup time (or length) is a very weak function of the wavenumber unless it is close to the cut-off wavenumbers.
The propagation of a liquid bolus along a liquid-lined flexible tube
- P. D. HOWELL, S. L. WATERS, J. B. GROTBERG
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- 10 March 2000, pp. 309-335
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We use lubrication theory and matched asymptotic expansions to model the quasi-steady propagation of a liquid plug or bolus through an elastic tube. In the limit of small capillary number, asymptotic expressions are found for the pressure drop across the bolus and the thickness of the liquid film left behind, as functions of the capillary number, the thickness of the liquid lining ahead of the bolus and the elastic characteristics of the tube wall. These results generalize the well-known theory for the low capillary number motion of a bubble through a rigid tube (Bretherton 1961). As in that theory, both the pressure drop across the bolus and the thickness of the film it leaves behind vary like the two-thirds power of the capillary number. In our generalized theory, the coefficients in the power laws depend on the elastic properties of the tube.
For a given thickness of the liquid lining ahead of the bolus, we identify a critical imposed pressure drop above which the bolus will eventually rupture, and hence the tube will reopen. We find that generically a tube with smaller hoop tension or smaller longitudinal tension is easier to reopen. This flow regime is fundamental to reopening of pulmonary airways, which may become plugged through disease or by instilled/aspirated fluids.
A note on the instabilities of a horizontal shear flow with a free surface
- L. ENGEVIK
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- 10 March 2000, pp. 337-346
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The instabilities of a free surface shear flow are considered, with special emphasis on the shear flow with the velocity profile U* = U*0sech2 (by*). This velocity profile, which is found to model very well the shear flow in the wake of a hydrofoil, has been focused on in previous studies, for instance by Dimas & Triantyfallou who made a purely numerical investigation of this problem, and by Longuet-Higgins who simplified the problem by approximating the velocity profile with a piecewise-linear profile to make it amenable to an analytical treatment. However, none has so far recognized that this problem in fact has a very simple solution which can be found analytically; that is, the stability boundaries, i.e. the boundaries between the stable and the unstable regions in the wavenumber (k)–Froude number (F)-plane, are given by simple algebraic equations in k and F. This applies also when surface tension is included. With no surface tension present there exist two distinct regimes of unstable waves for all values of the Froude number F > 0. If 0 < F [Lt ] 1, then one of the regimes is given by 0 < k < (1 − F2/6), the other by F−2 < k < 9F−2, which is a very extended region on the k-axis. When F [Gt ] 1 there is one small unstable region close to k = 0, i.e. 0 < k < 9/(4F2), the other unstable region being (3/2)1/2F−1 < k < 2 + 27/(8F2). When surface tension is included there may be one, two or even three distinct regimes of unstable modes depending on the value of the Froude number. For small F there is only one instability region, for intermediate values of F there are two regimes of unstable modes, and when F is large enough there are three distinct instability regions.
Schedule of International Conferences on Fluid Mechanics
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- 10 March 2000, pp. 348-349
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