A STUDY OF MICROPOLAR FLUID IN AN ANNULAR TUBE WITH APPLICATION TO BLOOD FLOW

2008 ◽  
Vol 08 (04) ◽  
pp. 561-576 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. MUTHU ◽  
B. V. RATHISH KUMAR ◽  
PEEYUSH CHANDRA

The oscillatory flow of micropolar fluid in an annular region with constriction, provided by variation of the outer tube radius, is investigated. It is assumed that the local constriction varies slowly over the cross-section of the annular region. The nonlinear governing equations of the flow are solved using a perturbation method to determine the flow characteristics. The effect of micropolar fluid parameters on mean flow and pressure variables is presented.

2003 ◽  
Vol 45 (2) ◽  
pp. 245-260 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Muthu ◽  
B. V. Rathish Kumar ◽  
Peeyush Chandra

AbstractWe carry out a study of the peristaltic motion of an incompressible micropolar fluid in a two-dimensional channel. The effects of viscoelastic wall properties and micropolar fluid parameters on the flow are investigated using the equations of the fluid as well as of the deformable boundaries. A perturbation technique is used to determine flow characteristics. The velocity profile is presented and discussed briefly. We find the critical values of the parameters involving wall characteristics, which cause mean flow reversal.


1997 ◽  
Vol 119 (4) ◽  
pp. 911-915 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Crnojevic´ ◽  
V. D. Djordjevic´

Compressible flow in channels of slowly varying cross section at moderately high Reynolds numbers is treated in the paper by employing some Stewartson-type transformations that convert the problem into an incompressible one. Both adiabatic flow and isothermal flow are considered, and a Poiseuille-type incompressible solution is mapped onto compressible plane in order to generate some exact solutions of the compressible governing equations. The results show striking effects that viscosity may have upon the flow characteristics in this case, in comparison with more conventional high Reynolds number flows.


2003 ◽  
Vol 73 (7) ◽  
pp. 481-494 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Muthu ◽  
B. V. Rathish Kumar ◽  
Peeyush Chandra

1993 ◽  
Vol 256 ◽  
pp. 69-83 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chris J. Swanson ◽  
Steven R. Stalp ◽  
Russell J. Donnelly

We have studied oscillatory flow through a 180° curved tube with the ratio of tube radius to radius of curvature equal to 1/7. The flow rate is constrained to vary sinusoidally about a non-zero mean at a specified period T, and mean flow rate Q. At a certain parameter range of interest Hamakiotes & Berger (1990) predict that fully developed flow undergoes a period-tripling bifurcation. Our measurements using laser-Doppler velocimetry found no bifurcation. An additional experiment was done to ensure that the flow was fully developed.


2016 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 150-155
Author(s):  
R. Troian ◽  
D. Dragna ◽  
C. Bailly ◽  
M.-A. Galland

Modeling of acoustic propagation in a duct with absorbing treatment is considered. The surface impedance of the treatment is sought in the form of a rational fraction. The numerical model is based on a resolution of the linearized Euler equations by finite difference time domain for the calculation of the acoustic propagation under a grazing flow. Sensitivity analysis of the considered numerical model is performed. The uncertainty of the physical parameters is taken into account to determine the most influential input parameters. The robustness of the solution vis-a-vis changes of the flow characteristics and the propagation medium is studied.


2021 ◽  
Vol 108 ◽  
pp. 106377
Author(s):  
Mohammed Faheem ◽  
Aqib Khan ◽  
Rakesh Kumar ◽  
Sher Afghan Khan ◽  
Waqar Asrar ◽  
...  

1984 ◽  
Vol 106 (1) ◽  
pp. 252-257 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. E. Metzger ◽  
C. S. Fan ◽  
S. W. Haley

Modern high-performance gas turbine engines operate at high turbine inlet temperatures and require internal convection cooling of many of the components exposed to the hot gas flow. Cooling air is supplied from the engine compressor at a cost to cycle performance and a design goal is to provide necessary cooling with the minimum required cooling air flow. In conjunction with this objective, two families of pin fin array geometries which have potential for improving airfoil internal cooling performance were studied experimentally. One family utilizes pins of a circular cross section with various orientations of the array with respect to the mean flow direction. The second family utilizes pins with an oblong cross section with various pin orientations with respect to the mean flow direction. Both heat transfer and pressure loss characteristics are presented. The results indicate that the use of circular pins with array orientation between staggered and inline can in some cases increase heat transfer while decreasing pressure loss. The use of elongated pins increases heat transfer, but at a high cost of increased pressure loss. In conjunction with the present measurements, previously published results were reexamined in order to estimate the magnitude of heat transfer coefficients on the pin surfaces relative to those of the endwall surfaces. The estimate indicates that the pin surface coefficients are approximately double the endwall values.


A new theory is presented to describe the baroclinic dynamics of density-driven currents and fronts over a sloping continental shelf. The frontal dynamics is geostrophic to leading-order but not quasi-geostrophic since the dynamic frontal height is not small in comparison with the scale frontal thickness. The evolution of the underlying slope water is modelled quasigeostrophically and includes the influence of a background vorticity gradient due to the sloping bottom . The two layers are coupled together via baroclinic vortex-tube stretching associated with the perturbeddensity-driven current. The current dynamics includes the advection of mean flow vorticity . The model equations are obtained in a formal asymptotic expansion of there levant two-layer shallow-water equation sand boundary conditions. It is shown that the governing equations for the model can be put in to non-canonical hamiltonian form. A comprehensive analysis of the general linear and nonlinear stability characteristics of the governing equations is given. The normal mode problem associated with steady along-shore currents is studied and sufficient stability and necessary instability conditions are presented. It is shown that a zero in the frontal vorticity gradient is not needed for instability. Jump conditions for the perturbation frontal thickness are systematically derived associated with the continuity of pressure and normal mass flux for steady frontal configurations that possess discontinuities in the velocity or vorticity, and rigorous regularity conditions are obtained for the perturbation thickness on outcroppings. The formal stability of arbitrary steady currents is studied. It is shown how to obtain general steady current solutions as a variational solution to a suitably constrained hamiltonian. General criteria are obtained for establishing the linear stability of these steady density-driven currents in the sense of Liapunov. In the limit of steady parallel along-shore flow, the formal stability results reduce to the sufficient conditions found for the normal modes. Finally, the nonlinear stability of steady density-driven currents and fronts is studied. Based on the formal stability analysis, appropriate convexity hypothesis are found that rigorously establish nonlinear stability of steady currents in the sense of Liapunov, and establish nonlinear saturation bounds on the perturbation flow with respect to a potential enstrophy/energy norm .


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