scholarly journals On two-dimensional finite amplitude electro-convection in a dielectric liquid induced by a strong unipolar injection

2015 ◽  
Vol 74 ◽  
pp. 85-95 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jian Wu ◽  
Philippe Traoré ◽  
Alberto T. Pérez ◽  
Pédro A. Vázquez
2010 ◽  
Vol 658 ◽  
pp. 279-293 ◽  
Author(s):  
PH. TRAORÉ ◽  
A. T. PÉREZ ◽  
D. KOULOVA ◽  
H. ROMAT

In this paper, we solve numerically the entire set of equations associated with the electro-thermo-convective phenomena that take place in a planar layer of dielectric liquid heated from below and subjected to unipolar injection. For the first time the whole set of coupled equations is solved: Navier–Stokes equations, electrohydrodynamic (EHD) equations and the energy equation. We first validate the numerical simulation by comparing the electro-convection stability criteria with ones obtained with a stability approach. The numerical solution of the electro-thermo-convection problem is then presented entirely with a detailed analysis of stability parameters. In particular, the relation between fluid velocity, non-dimensional electrical parameter T, Rayleigh number Ra and Prandtl number Pr is given. An analytical model is presented in order to understand the flow behaviour at some critical conditions. The way that the onset of motion passes from purely electrical convection to purely thermal convection is, in particular, investigated and explained in detail. Finally, a result on the heat transfer enhancement due to electro-convection is exhibited and compared with data from experimental works available in this field.


2015 ◽  
Vol 22 (5) ◽  
pp. 2779-2785 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philippe Traore ◽  
Jian Wu ◽  
Christophe Louste ◽  
Pedro A. Vazquez ◽  
Alberto T. Perez

2000 ◽  
Vol 413 ◽  
pp. 1-47 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. P. CAULFIELD ◽  
W. R. PELTIER

We investigate the detailed nature of the ‘mixing transition’ through which turbulence may develop in both homogeneous and stratified free shear layers. Our focus is upon the fundamental role in transition, and in particular the associated ‘mixing’ (i.e. small-scale motions which lead to an irreversible increase in the total potential energy of the flow) that is played by streamwise vortex streaks, which develop once the primary and typically two-dimensional Kelvin–Helmholtz (KH) billow saturates at finite amplitude.Saturated KH billows are susceptible to a family of three-dimensional secondary instabilities. In homogeneous fluid, secondary stability analyses predict that the stream-wise vortex streaks originate through a ‘hyperbolic’ instability that is localized in the vorticity braids that develop between billow cores. In sufficiently strongly stratified fluid, the secondary instability mechanism is fundamentally different, and is associated with convective destabilization of the statically unstable sublayers that are created as the KH billows roll up.We test the validity of these theoretical predictions by performing a sequence of three-dimensional direct numerical simulations of shear layer evolution, with the flow Reynolds number (defined on the basis of shear layer half-depth and half the velocity difference) Re = 750, the Prandtl number of the fluid Pr = 1, and the minimum gradient Richardson number Ri(0) varying between 0 and 0.1. These simulations quantitatively verify the predictions of our stability analysis, both as to the spanwise wavelength and the spatial localization of the streamwise vortex streaks. We track the nonlinear amplification of these secondary coherent structures, and investigate the nature of the process which actually triggers mixing. Both in stratified and unstratified shear layers, the subsequent nonlinear amplification of the initially localized streamwise vortex streaks is driven by the vertical shear in the evolving mean flow. The two-dimensional flow associated with the primary KH billow plays an essentially catalytic role. Vortex stretching causes the streamwise vortices to extend beyond their initially localized regions, and leads eventually to a streamwise-aligned collision between the streamwise vortices that are initially associated with adjacent cores.It is through this collision of neighbouring streamwise vortex streaks that a final and violent finite-amplitude subcritical transition occurs in both stratified and unstratified shear layers, which drives the mixing process. In a stratified flow with appropriate initial characteristics, the irreversible small-scale mixing of the density which is triggered by this transition leads to the development of a third layer within the flow of relatively well-mixed fluid that is of an intermediate density, bounded by narrow regions of strong density gradient.


Author(s):  
A. C. Fowler

It is proposed that the formation of the subglacial bedforms known as drumlins occurs through an instability associated with the flow of ice over a wet deformable till. We pose a mathematical model that describes this instability, and we solve a simplified version of the model numerically in order to establish the form of finite-amplitude two-dimensional waveforms. A feature of the solutions is that cavities frequently form downstream of the bedforms; we allow the model to cater for this possibility and we provide an efficient numerical method to solve the resulting free boundary problem.


1997 ◽  
Vol 335 ◽  
pp. 1-28 ◽  
Author(s):  
MELVIN E. STERN ◽  
ERIC P. CHASSIGNET ◽  
J. A. WHITEHEAD

The previously observed spatial evolution of the two-dimensional turbulent flow from a source on the vertical wall of a shallow layer of rapidly rotating fluid is strikingly different from the non-rotating three-dimensional counterpart, insofar as the instability eddies generated in the former case cause the flow to separate completely from the wall at a finite downstream distance. In seeking an explanation of this, we first compute the temporal evolution of two-dimensional finite-amplitude waves on an unstable laminar jet using a finite difference calculation at large Reynolds number. This yields a dipolar vorticity pattern which propagates normal to the wall, while leaving some of the near-wall vorticity (negative) of the basic flow behind. The residual far-field eddy therefore contains a net positive circulation and this property is incorporated in a heuristic point-vortex model of the spatial evolution of the instability eddies observed in a laboratory experiment of a flow emerging from a source on a vertical wall in a rotating tank. The model parameterizes the effect of Ekman bottom friction in decreasing the circulation of eddies which are periodically emitted from the source flow on the wall. Further downstream, the point vortices of the model merge and separate abruptly from the wall; the statistics suggest that the downstream separation distance scales with the Ekman spin-up time (inversely proportional to the square root of the Coriolis parameter f) and with the mean source velocity. When the latter is small and f is large, qualitative support is obtained from laboratory experiments.


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