Effects of Coriolis force and nonuniform temperature gradient on the Rayleigh–Benard convection

1986 ◽  
Vol 64 (1) ◽  
pp. 90-99 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Rudraiah ◽  
O. P. Chandna

The effects of the Coriolis force and a nonuniform temperature gradient on the onset of the Rayleigh–Benard convection in a thin, horizontal, rotating fluid layer is studied using linear-stability analysis. It is shown analytically that the method and rate of heating, the Coriolis force, and the nature of the bounding surfaces of the fluid layer significantly influence the value of the Rayleigh number at the onset of marginal convection. The mechanism for suppressing or augmenting convection is discussed in detail. The Galerkin technique employed here is much easier to use than that the method of Chandrasekhar (5). The analytical results obtained from using this procedure are compared with the published experimental data and the results obtained from numerical procedures; good agreement is found.

2018 ◽  
Vol 841 ◽  
pp. 825-850 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chong Shen Ng ◽  
Andrew Ooi ◽  
Detlef Lohse ◽  
Daniel Chung

Previous numerical studies on homogeneous Rayleigh–Bénard convection, which is Rayleigh–Bénard convection (RBC) without walls, and therefore without boundary layers, have revealed a scaling regime that is consistent with theoretical predictions of bulk-dominated thermal convection. In this so-called asymptotic regime, previous studies have predicted that the Nusselt number ($\mathit{Nu}$) and the Reynolds number ($\mathit{Re}$) vary with the Rayleigh number ($\mathit{Ra}$) according to $\mathit{Nu}\sim \mathit{Ra}^{1/2}$ and $\mathit{Re}\sim \mathit{Ra}^{1/2}$ at small Prandtl numbers ($\mathit{Pr}$). In this study, we consider a flow that is similar to RBC but with the direction of temperature gradient perpendicular to gravity instead of parallel to it; we refer to this configuration as vertical natural convection (VC). Since the direction of the temperature gradient is different in VC, there is no exact relation for the average kinetic dissipation rate, which makes it necessary to explore alternative definitions for $\mathit{Nu}$, $\mathit{Re}$ and $\mathit{Ra}$ and to find physical arguments for closure, rather than making use of the exact relation between $\mathit{Nu}$ and the dissipation rates as in RBC. Once we remove the walls from VC to obtain the homogeneous set-up, we find that the aforementioned $1/2$-power-law scaling is present, similar to the case of homogeneous RBC. When focusing on the bulk, we find that the Nusselt and Reynolds numbers in the bulk of VC too exhibit the $1/2$-power-law scaling. These results suggest that the $1/2$-power-law scaling may even be found at lower Rayleigh numbers if the appropriate quantities in the turbulent bulk flow are employed for the definitions of $\mathit{Ra}$, $\mathit{Re}$ and $\mathit{Nu}$. From a stability perspective, at low- to moderate-$\mathit{Ra}$, we find that the time evolution of the Nusselt number for homogenous vertical natural convection is unsteady, which is consistent with the nature of the elevator modes reported in previous studies on homogeneous RBC.


2019 ◽  
Vol 141 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
U. Madanan ◽  
R. J. Goldstein

Abstract The effect of sidewall conductance on Nusselt number for the Rayleigh-Bénard convection is examined by performing nearly identical sets of experiments with sidewalls made of three different materials. These experimental results are utilized to extrapolate and estimate the Nusselt number for an ideal zero-thermal-conductivity sidewall case, which is the case when the sidewalls are perfectly insulating. A semi-analytical model is proposed, based on the concept of extended surfaces, to compute the discrepancy in Nusselt number caused by the presence of finite thermal conductance of the sidewalls. The predictions obtained using this model are found to be in good agreement with the corresponding experimentally determined values.


Author(s):  
Hannes J. Brauckmann ◽  
Bruno Eckhardt ◽  
Jörg Schumacher

Rayleigh–Bénard convection and Taylor–Couette flow are two canonical flows that have many properties in common. We here compare the two flows in detail for parameter values where the Nusselt numbers, i.e. the thermal transport and the angular momentum transport normalized by the corresponding laminar values, coincide. We study turbulent Rayleigh–Bénard convection in air at Rayleigh number Ra =10 7 and Taylor–Couette flow at shear Reynolds number Re S =2×10 4 for two different mean rotation rates but the same Nusselt numbers. For individual pairwise related fields and convective currents, we compare the probability density functions normalized by the corresponding root mean square values and taken at different distances from the wall. We find one rotation number for which there is very good agreement between the mean profiles of the two corresponding quantities temperature and angular momentum. Similarly, there is good agreement between the fluctuations in temperature and velocity components. For the heat and angular momentum currents, there are differences in the fluctuations outside the boundary layers that increase with overall rotation and can be related to differences in the flow structures in the boundary layer and in the bulk. The study extends the similarities between the two flows from global quantities to local quantities and reveals the effects of rotation on the transport. This article is part of the themed issue ‘Toward the development of high-fidelity models of wall turbulence at large Reynolds number’.


2001 ◽  
Vol 25 (9) ◽  
pp. 609-619 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pradeep G. Siddheshwar ◽  
C. V. Sri Krishna

The qualitative effect of nonuniform temperature gradient on the linear stability analysis of the Rayleigh-Benard convection problem in a Boussinesquian, viscoelastic fluid-filled, high-porosity medium is studied numerically using the single-term Galerkin technique. The eigenvalue is obtained for free-free, free-rigid, and rigid-rigid boundary combinations with isothermal temperature conditions. Thermodynamics and also the present stability analysis dictates the strain retardation time to be less than the stress relaxation time for convection to set in as oscillatory motions in a high-porosity medium. Furthermore, the analysis predicts the critical eigenvalue for the viscoelastic problem to be less than that of the corresponding Newtonian fluid problem.


2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jitender Singh

The simple shooting method is revisited in order to solve nonlinear two-point BVP numerically. The BVP of the type is considered where components of are known at one of the boundaries and components of are specified at the other boundary. The map is assumed to be smooth and satisfies the Lipschitz condition. The two-point BVP is transformed into a system of nonlinear algebraic equations in several variables which, is solved numerically using the Newton method. Unlike the one-dimensional case, the Newton method does not always have quadratic convergence in general. However, we prove that the rate of convergence of the Newton iterative scheme associated with the BVPs of present type is at least quadratic. This indeed justifies and generalizes the shooting method of Ha (2001) to the BVPs arising in the higher order nonlinear ODEs. With at least quadratic convergence of Newton's method, an explicit application in solving nonlinear Rayleigh-Bénard convection in a horizontal fluid layer heated from the below is discussed where rapid convergence in nonlinear shooting essentially plays an important role.


2000 ◽  
Vol 84 (1) ◽  
pp. 87-90 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey L. Rogers ◽  
Michael F. Schatz ◽  
Jonathan L. Bougie ◽  
Jack B. Swift

2010 ◽  
Vol 665 ◽  
pp. 158-198 ◽  
Author(s):  
RALF W. WITTENBERG

We investigate the influence of the thermal properties of the boundaries in turbulent Rayleigh–Bénard convection on analytical upper bounds on convective heat transport. We model imperfectly conducting bounding plates in two ways: using idealized mixed thermal boundary conditions (BCs) of constant Biot number η, continuously interpolating between the previously studied fixed temperature (η = 0) and fixed flux (η = ∞) cases; and by explicitly coupling the evolution equations in the fluid in the Boussinesq approximation through temperature and flux continuity to identical upper and lower conducting plates. In both cases, we systematically formulate a bounding principle and obtain explicit upper bounds on the Nusselt numberNuin terms of the usual Rayleigh numberRameasuring the average temperature drop across the fluid layer, using the ‘background method’ developed by Doering and Constantin. In the presence of plates, we find that the bounds depend on σ =d/λ, wheredis the ratio of plate to fluid thickness and λ is the conductivity ratio, and that the bounding problem may be mapped onto that for Biot number η = σ. In particular, for each σ > 0, for sufficiently largeRa(depending on σ) we show thatNu≤c(σ)R1/3≤CRa1/2, whereCis a σ-independent constant, and where the control parameterRis a Rayleigh number defined in terms of the full temperature drop across the entire plate–fluid–plate system. In theRa→ ∞ limit, the usual fixed temperature assumption is a singular limit of the general bounding problem, while fixed flux conditions appear to be most relevant to the asymptoticNu–Rascaling even for highly conducting plates.


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