On Hadley flow in a porous layer with vertical heterogeneity

2012 ◽  
Vol 710 ◽  
pp. 304-323 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Barletta ◽  
D. A. Nield

AbstractThe onset of thermoconvective instability in a horizontal porous layer with a basic Hadley flow is studied, under the assumption of weak vertical heterogeneity. Hadley flow is a single-cell convective circulation induced by horizontal linear changes of the layer boundary temperatures. When combined with heating from below, these thermal boundary conditions yield a temperature gradient inclined to the vertical, in the basic state. The linear stability of the basic state is studied by considering small-amplitude disturbances of the velocity field and the temperature field. The linearized governing equations for the disturbances are then solved both by Galerkin’s method of weighted residuals and by a combined use of the Runge–Kutta method and the shooting method. The effect of weak heterogeneity of the permeability and the effective thermal conductivity of the porous medium is studied with respect to neutral stability conditions. It is shown that, among the normal mode disturbances, the most unstable are longitudinal rolls, that is, plane waves with a wave vector perpendicular to the imposed horizontal temperature gradient. The effect of heterogeneity becomes important only for high values of the horizontal Rayleigh number, associated with the horizontal temperature gradient, approximately greater than 60. In this regime, the effect of heterogeneity is destabilizing. It is shown that heterogeneity with respect to thermal conductivity is of major importance in the onset of instability.

2006 ◽  
Vol 9 (05) ◽  
pp. 530-542 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hadi Nasrabadi ◽  
Kassem Ghorayeb ◽  
Abbas Firoozabadi

Summary We present formulation and numerical solution of two-phase multicomponent diffusion and natural convection in porous media. Thermal diffusion, pressure diffusion, and molecular diffusion are included in the diffusion expression from thermodynamics of irreversible processes. The formulation and the numerical solution are used to perform initialization in a 2D cross section. We use both homogeneous and layered media without and with anisotropy in our calculations. Numerical examples for a binary mixture of C1/C3 and a multicomponent reservoir fluid are presented. Results show a strong effect of natural convection in species distribution. Results also show that there are at least two main rotating cells at steady state: one in the gas cap, and one in the oil column. Introduction Proper initialization is an important aspect of reliable reservoir simulations. The use of the Gibbs segregation condition generally cannot provide reliable initialization in hydrocarbon reservoirs. This is caused, in part, by the effect of thermal diffusion (caused by the geothermal temperature gradient), which cannot be neglected in some cases; thermal diffusion might be the main phenomenon affecting compositional variation in hydrocarbon reservoirs, especially for near-critical gas/condensate reservoirs (Ghorayeb et al. 2003). Generally, temperature increases with increasing burial depth because heat flows from the Earth's interior toward the surface. The temperature profile, or geothermal gradient, is related to the thermal conductivity of a body of rock and the heat flux. Thermal conductivity is not necessarily uniform because it depends on the mineralogical composition of the rock, the porosity, and the presence of water or gas. Therefore, differences in thermal conductivity between adjacent lithologies can result in a horizontal temperature gradient. Horizontal temperature gradients in some offshore fields can be observed because of a constant water temperature (approximately 4°C) in different depths in the seabed floor. The horizontal temperature gradient causes natural convection that might have a significant effect on species distribution (Firoozabadi 1999). The combined effects of diffusion (pressure, thermal, and molecular) and natural convection on compositional variation in multicomponent mixtures in porous media have been investigated for single-phase systems (Riley and Firoozabadi 1998; Ghorayeb and Firoozabadi 2000a).The results from these references show the importance of natural convection, which, in some cases, overrides diffusion and results in a uniform composition. Natural convection also can result in increased horizontal compositional variation, an effect similar to that in a thermogravitational column (Ghorayeb and Firoozabadi 2001; Nasrabadi et al. 2006). The combined effect of convection and diffusion on species separation has been the subject of many experimental studies. Separation in a thermogravitational column with both effects has been measured widely (Schott 1973; Costeseque 1982; El Mataaoui 1986). The thermogravitational column consists of two isothermal vertical plates with different temperatures separated by a narrow space. The space can be either without a porous medium or filled with a porous medium. The thermal diffusion, in a binary mixture, causes one component to segregate to the hot plate and the other to the cold plate. Because of the density gradient caused by temperature and concentration gradients, convection flow occurs and creates a concentration difference between the top and bottom of the column. Analytical and numerical models have been presented to analyze the experimental results (Lorenz and Emery 1959; Jamet et al. 1992; Nasrabadi et al. 2006). The experimental and theoretical studies show that the composition difference between the top and bottom of the column increases with permeability until an optimum permeability is reached. Then, the composition difference declines as permeability increases. The process in a thermogravitational column shows the significance of the convection from a horizontal temperature gradient.


2016 ◽  
Vol 13 (02) ◽  
pp. 1640001 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonio Barletta ◽  
Michele Celli

The aim of this paper is to analyze the onset of convective instability in a plane porous channel inclined to the horizontal. A net upslope or downslope flow is considered, so that mixed convection takes place as caused by the uniform and symmetric heat fluxes prescribed on the impermeable bounding walls. The thermoconvective instability of the basic flow is studied versus small-amplitude wavelike perturbations. The hybrid analytical–numerical technique adopted in this paper, in order to track and illustrate the parametric changes of neutral stability curves, is Galerkin’s method of weighted residuals. Numerical values at significant points on the neutral stability curves are obtained by employing an accurate Runge–Kutta solver combined with the shooting method.


2012 ◽  
Vol 134 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Barletta ◽  
M. Celli ◽  
A. V. Kuznetsov

The aim of this study is the analysis of the onset conditions for the thermal instability in a fluid saturated porous medium. The investigation refers to an infinitely wide horizontal porous layer with vertical heterogeneity, such that the lower plane boundary is impermeable and thermally insulated (adiabatic). The temperature distribution on the upper plane boundary is assumed to be prescribed and linearly varying in the horizontal direction. It is shown that these boundary conditions are compatible with a buoyancy-induced parallel-flow solution such that the temperature gradient is inclined with respect to the vertical direction. The basic parallel flow is perturbed by small–amplitude roll disturbances, so that a linear analysis of the neutral stability is carried out. The local balance equations for the disturbances are solved numerically. The critical conditions for the onset of convection are determined.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonio Barletta ◽  
Michele Celli

Abstract The thermoconvective instability of the parallel vertical flow in a fluid saturated porous layer bounded by parallel open boundaries is studied. The open boundaries are assumed to be kept at constant uniform pressure while their temperatures are uniform and different, thus forcing a horizontal temperature gradient across the layer. The anisotropic permeability of the porous layer is accounted for by assuming the principal axes to be oriented along the directions perpendicular and parallel to the layer boundaries. A linear stability analysis based on the Fourier normal modes of perturbation is carried out by testing the effect of the inclination of the normal mode wave vector to the vertical. The neutral stability curves and the critical Rayleigh number for the onset of the instability are evaluated by solving numerically the stability eigenvalue problem.


1971 ◽  
Vol 45 (4) ◽  
pp. 759-768 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. M. R. Williams

The effect of a temperature gradient in a gas inclined at an angle to a boundary wall has been investigated. For an infinite half-space of gas it is found that, in addition to the conventional temperature slip problem, the component of the temperature gradient parallel to the wall induces a net mass flow known as thermal creep. We show that the temperature slip and thermal creep effects can be decoupled and treated quite separately.Expressions are obtained for the creep velocity and heat flux, both far from and at the boundary; it is noted that thermal creep tends to reduce the effective thermal conductivity of the medium.


Author(s):  
Fan Gong ◽  
Yong Huang

The objective of this work is to investigate the flame stabilization mechanism and the impact of the operating conditions on the characteristics of the steady, lean premixed flames. It’s well known that the flame base is very important to the existence of a flame, such as the flame after a V-gutter, which is typically used in ramjet and turbojet or turbofan afterburners and laboratory experiments. We performed two-dimensional simulations of turbulent premixed flames anchored downstream of the heat-conducting V-gutters in a confined passage for kerosene-air combustion. The flame bases are symmetrically located in the shear layers of the recirculation zone immediately after the V-gutter’s trailing edge. The effects of equivalence ratio of inlet mixture, inlet temperature, V-gutter’s thermal conductivity and inlet velocity on the flame base movements are investigated. When the equivalence ratio is raised, the flame base moves upstream slightly and the temperature gradient dT/dx near the flame base increases, so the flame base is strengthened. When the inlet temperature is raised, the flame base moves upstream very slightly, and near the flame base dT/dx increases and dT/dy decreases, so the flame base is strengthened. As the V-gutter’s thermal conductivity increases, the flame base moves downstream, and the temperature gradient dT/dx near the flame base decreases, so the flame base is weakened. When the inlet velocity is raised, the flame base moves upstream, and the convection heat loss with inlet mixture increases, so the flame base is weakened.


1966 ◽  
Vol 44 (4) ◽  
pp. 511-517 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. M. Ogilvie ◽  
R. H. Stinson

Adult animals have been used for most of the previous mammalian temperature selection studies, and relatively few systematic observations have been made with young animals. In this investigation, laboratory mice (Mus musculus), ranging in age from 1 to 84 days, were studied in a horizontal temperature gradient established along a 5-ft copper bar. Despite poorly developed locomotion and cold immobilization, it was shown that the temperature selection response is present at birth. The initially high level of selection appeared to be maintained for about 2 weeks, after which it began to decrease, rapidly at first, and then more slowly until the adult level was reached.


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