scholarly journals The effect of rapid rotation on a vertical bridgman furnace at large Rayleigh number

2007 ◽  
Vol 60 (2) ◽  
pp. 201-230
Author(s):  
V Shyam ◽  
M. Foster
2000 ◽  
Vol 409 ◽  
pp. 185-221 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. R. FOSTER

Convection effects in the melt of a vertical Bridgman furnace, used for solidifying a dilute binary alloy, are known to cause significant, and undesirable, non-uniformity in the alloy. We have found previously that non-axisymmetry significantly degrades the performance of the furnace at large Rayleigh number, Ra, and small Biot number, [Bscr ]. There have been a number of studies on improvement of the alloy quality by the introduction of additional forces into the melt flow – magnetic forces or d'Alembert forces due to various sorts of acceleration of the ampoule. In this paper, we explore the effects on the radial segregation generated by rotating the ampoule about its vertical axis. We determine that the magnitude of segregation is proportional to the product of [Bscr ] and the thickness of the thermal layer on the crystal–melt interface. As the rotation, as measured by a Taylor number, [Tscr ], increases beyond O(Ra1/3), the thermal layer thickens and so the segregation increases. Finally, at [Tscr ] = O(Ra1/2), the thermal adjustment occurs on outer scales, and hence the solutal concentration increases to O([Bscr ]). Hence rotation about the vertical axis actually degrades performance!


1978 ◽  
Vol 88 (4) ◽  
pp. 769-792 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. R. Kassoy ◽  
A. Zebib

Faulted regions associated with geothermal areas are assumed to be composed of rock which has been heavily fractured within the fault zone by continuous tectonic activity. The fractured zone is modelled as a vertical, slender, two-dimensional channel of saturated porous material with impermeable walls on which the temperature increases linearly with depth. The development of an isothermal slug flow entering the fault at a large depth is examined. An entry solution and the subsequent approach to the fully developed configuration are obtained for large Rayleigh number flow. The former is characterized by growing thermal boundary layers adjacent to the walls and a slightly accelerated isothermal core flow. Further downstream the development is described by a parabolic system. It is shown that a class of fully developed solutions is not spatially stable.


2007 ◽  
Vol 586 ◽  
pp. 41-57 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. J. J. GRAMBERG ◽  
P. D. HOWELL ◽  
J. R. OCKENDON

This paper considers a paradigm large-Prandtl-number, large-Rayleigh-number forced convection problem suggested by the batch melting process in the glass industry. Although the fluid is heated from above, non-uniform heating in the horizontal direction induces thermal boundary layers in which colder liquid is driven over hotter liquid. This leads to an interesting selection problem in the boundary layer analysis, whose resolution is suggested by a combination of analytical and numerical evidence.


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