Magnetohydrodynamic channel flows with weak transverse magnetic fields

Author(s):  
A. P. Rothmayer

Magnetohydrodynamic flow of an incompressible fluid through a plane channel with slowly varying walls and a magnetic field applied transverse to the channel is investigated in the high Reynolds number limit. It is found that the magnetic field can first influence the hydrodynamic flow when the Hartmann number reaches a sufficiently large value. The magnetic field is found to suppress the steady and unsteady viscous flow near the channel walls unless the wall shapes become large.

2011 ◽  
Vol 681 ◽  
pp. 434-461 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. FAVIER ◽  
F. S. GODEFERD ◽  
C. CAMBON ◽  
A. DELACHE ◽  
W. J. T. BOS

We analyse the anisotropy of homogeneous turbulence in an electrically conducting fluid submitted to a uniform magnetic field, for low magnetic Reynolds number, in the quasi-static approximation. We interpret contradictory earlier predictions between linearized theory and simulations: in the linear limit, the kinetic energy of transverse velocity components, normal to the magnetic field, decays faster than the kinetic energy of the axial component, along the magnetic field (Moffatt, J. Fluid Mech., vol. 28, 1967, p. 571); whereas many numerical studies predict a final state characterized by dominant energy of transverse velocity components. We investigate the corresponding nonlinear phenomenon using direct numerical simulation (DNS) of freely decaying turbulence, and a two-point statistical spectral closure based on the eddy-damped quasi-normal Markovian (EDQNM) model. The transition from the three-dimensional turbulent flow to a ‘two-and-a-half-dimensional’ flow (Montgomery & Turner, Phys. Fluids, vol. 25, 1982, p. 345) is a result of the combined effects of short-time linear Joule dissipation and longer time nonlinear creation of polarization anisotropy. It is this combination of linear and nonlinear effects which explains the disagreement between predictions from linearized theory and results from numerical simulations. The transition is characterized by the elongation of turbulent structures along the applied magnetic field, and by the strong anisotropy of directional two-point correlation spectra, in agreement with experimental evidence. Inertial equatorial transfers in both DNS and the model are presented to describe in detail the most important equilibrium dynamics. Spectral scalings are maintained in high-Reynolds-number turbulence attainable only with the EDQNM model, which also provides simplified modelling of the asymptotic state of quasi-static magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) turbulence.


1961 ◽  
Vol 83 (4) ◽  
pp. 445-453 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samuel Globe

An experimental investigation has been made of the effect of an axial magnetic field on transition from laminar to turbulent flow and on the turbulent friction factor for pipe flow of mercury. Magnetic-flux densities up to 5700 gauss were obtained with a water-cooled solenoid. Pipes of glass and aluminum were used of approximately 0.1 to 0.2 in. diam. The maximum Hartmann number, with the hydraulic radius (half the actual radius) taken as the characteristic length, was about 20. Measurements were made of the pressure gradient and velocity of flow. The transition Reynolds number was determined from the curve of friction factor against Reynolds number. The results show an increasing value of minimum transition Reynolds number with Hartmann number. The magnetic field also brought about a decrease in the turbulent friction factor and corresponding shear force at the wall.


2010 ◽  
Vol 649 ◽  
pp. 115-134 ◽  
Author(s):  
JĀNIS PRIEDE ◽  
SVETLANA ALEKSANDROVA ◽  
SERGEI MOLOKOV

We analyse numerically the linear stability of the fully developed flow of a liquid metal in a square duct subject to a transverse magnetic field. The walls of the duct perpendicular to the magnetic field are perfectly conducting whereas the parallel ones are insulating. In a sufficiently strong magnetic field, the flow consists of two jets at the insulating walls and a near-stagnant core. We use a vector stream function formulation and Chebyshev collocation method to solve the eigenvalue problem for small-amplitude perturbations. Due to the two-fold reflection symmetry of the base flow the disturbances with four different parity combinations over the duct cross-section decouple from each other. Magnetic field renders the flow in a square duct linearly unstable at the Hartmann number Ha ≈ 5.7 with respect to a disturbance whose vorticity component along the magnetic field is even across the field and odd along it. For this mode, the minimum of the critical Reynolds number Rec ≈ 2018, based on the maximal velocity, is attained at Ha ≈ 10. Further increase of the magnetic field stabilizes this mode with Rec growing approximately as Ha. For Ha > 40, the spanwise parity of the most dangerous disturbance reverses across the magnetic field. At Ha ≈ 46 a new pair of most dangerous disturbances appears with the parity along the magnetic field being opposite to that of the previous two modes. The critical Reynolds number, which is very close for both of these modes, attains a minimum, Rec ≈ 1130, at Ha ≈ 70 and increases as Rec ≈ 91Ha1/2 for Ha ≫ 1. The asymptotics of the critical wavenumber is kc ≈ 0.525Ha1/2 while the critical phase velocity approaches 0.475 of the maximum jet velocity.


2006 ◽  
Vol 129 (5) ◽  
pp. 517-523 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sintu Singha ◽  
K. P. Sinhamahapatra ◽  
S. K. Mukherjea

The two-dimensional incompressible laminar viscous flow of a conducting fluid past a square cylinder placed centrally in a channel subjected to an imposed transverse magnetic field has been simulated to study the effect of a magnetic field on vortex shedding from a bluff body at different Reynolds numbers varying from 50 to 250. The present staggered grid finite difference simulation shows that for a steady flow the separated zone behind the cylinder is reduced as the magnetic field strength is increased. For flows in the periodic vortex shedding and unsteady wake regime an imposed transverse magnetic field is found to have a considerable effect on the flow characteristics with marginal increase in Strouhal number and a marked drop in the unsteady lift amplitude indicating a reduction in the strength of the shed vortices. It has further been observed, that it is possible to completely eliminate the periodic vortex shedding at the higher Reynolds numbers and to establish a steady flow if a sufficiently strong magnetic field is imposed. The necessary strength of the magnetic field, however, depends on the flow Reynolds number and increases with the increase in Reynolds number. This paper describes the algorithm in detail and presents important results that show the effect of the magnetic field on the separated wake and on the periodic vortex shedding process.


1965 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 577-590 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. C. R. Hunt

The paper presents an analysis of laminar motion of a conducting liquid in a rectangular duct under a uniform transverse magnetic field. The effects of the duct having conducting walls are investigated. Exact solutions are obtained for two cases, (i) perfectly conducting walls perpendicular to the field and thin walls of arbitrary conductivity parallel to the field, and (ii) non-conducting walls parallel to the field and thin walls of arbitrary conductivity perpendicular to the field.The boundary layers on the walls parallel to the field are studied in case (i) and it is found that at high Hartmann number (M), large positive and negative velocities of order MVc are induced, where Vc is the velocity of the core. It is suggested that contrary to previous assumptions the magnetic field may in some cases have a destabilizing effect on flow in ducts.


2013 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 215-226
Author(s):  
Sarfraz Ahmed

The flow of blood in human circulatory system can be controlled by applying appropriate magnetic field. It is also well known that non-Newtonian nature of blood significantly influences the flows, particularly in the cases where blood vessels are curved, branching or narrow etc. Stenosis refers to localized narrowing of an artery and is a frequent result of arterial disease and is caused mainly due to intravascular atherosclerotic plaque which develops at the arterial wall and protrudes into the lumen of the vessel. Such constrictions disturb normal blood flow through the artery. Here study is made on the flow of blood through a stenosed artery with the effect of slip at the boundary in presence of transverse magnetic field considering blood as Casson fluid (non- Newtonian fluid). The equations of motion has have been solved numerically. The effect of various parameters on the flow characteristics like Hartmann number, Reynolds number has been discussed. Numerical results were obtained for different values of the Hartmann number M and Reynolds number Re. It is observed that the fluid velocity decreases as the Hartmann number increases.


2008 ◽  
Vol 83 (7-9) ◽  
pp. 1092-1096 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shin-ichi Satake ◽  
Naoshi Yoshida ◽  
Tomoaki Kunugi ◽  
Kazuyuki Takase ◽  
Yasuo Ose ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 708 ◽  
pp. 111-127 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jānis Priede ◽  
Svetlana Aleksandrova ◽  
Sergei Molokov

AbstractWe analyse numerically the linear stability of a liquid-metal flow in a rectangular duct with perfectly electrically conducting walls subject to a uniform transverse magnetic field. A non-standard three-dimensional vector stream-function/vorticity formulation is used with a Chebyshev collocation method to solve the eigenvalue problem for small-amplitude perturbations. A relatively weak magnetic field is found to render the flow linearly unstable as two weak jets appear close to the centre of the duct at the Hartmann number $\mathit{Ha}\approx 9. 6. $ In a sufficiently strong magnetic field, the instability following the jets becomes confined in the layers of characteristic thickness $\delta \ensuremath{\sim} {\mathit{Ha}}^{\ensuremath{-} 1/ 2} $ located at the walls parallel to the magnetic field. In this case the instability is determined by $\delta , $ which results in both the critical Reynolds number and wavenumber scaling as ${\ensuremath{\sim} }{\delta }^{\ensuremath{-} 1} . $ Instability modes can have one of the four different symmetry combinations along and across the magnetic field. The most unstable is a pair of modes with an even distribution of vorticity along the magnetic field. These two modes represent strongly non-uniform vortices aligned with the magnetic field, which rotate either in the same or opposite senses across the magnetic field. The former enhance while the latter weaken one another provided that the magnetic field is not too strong or the walls parallel to the field are not too far apart. In a strong magnetic field, when the vortices at the opposite walls are well separated by the core flow, the critical Reynolds number and wavenumber for both of these instability modes are the same: ${\mathit{Re}}_{c} \approx 642{\mathit{Ha}}^{1/ 2} + 8. 9\ensuremath{\times} 1{0}^{3} {\mathit{Ha}}^{\ensuremath{-} 1/ 2} $ and ${k}_{c} \approx 0. 477{\mathit{Ha}}^{1/ 2} . $ The other pair of modes, which differs from the previous one by an odd distribution of vorticity along the magnetic field, is more stable with an approximately four times higher critical Reynolds number.


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