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2014 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 434-439
Author(s):  
Sameh Benna ◽  
Olfa Bayoudh

The effect of time periodic body force (or g-jitter or gravity modulation) on the onset of Rayleigh-Bnard electro-convention in a micropolar fluid layer is investigated by making linear and non-linear stability analysis. The stability of the horizontal fluid layer heated from below is examined by assuming time periodic body acceleration. This normally occurs in satellites and in vehicles connected with micro gravity simulation studies. A linear and non-linear analysis is performed to show that gravity modulation can significantly affect the stability limits of the system. The linear theory is based on normal mode analysis and perturbation method. Small amplitude of modulation is used to compute the critical Rayleigh number and wave number. The shift in the critical Rayleigh number is calculated as a function of frequency of modulation. The non-linear analysis is based on the truncated Fourier series representation. The resulting non-autonomous Lorenz model is solved numerically to quantify the heat transport. It is observed that the gravity modulation leads to delayed convection and reduced heat transport.

1999 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pouya Amili ◽  
Yanis C. Yortsos

Abstract We study the linear stability of a two-phase heat pipe zone (vapor-liquid counterflow) in a porous medium, overlying a superheated vapor zone. The competing effects of gravity, condensation and heat transfer on the stability of a planar base state are analyzed in the linear stability limit. The rate of growth of unstable disturbances is expressed in terms of the wave number of the disturbance, and dimensionless numbers, such as the Rayleigh number, a dimensionless heat flux and other parameters. A critical Rayleigh number is identified and shown to be different than in natural convection under single phase conditions. The results find applications to geothermal systems, to enhanced oil recovery using steam injection, as well as to the conditions of the proposed Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository. This study complements recent work of the stability of boiling by Ramesh and Torrance (1993).


2013 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 899-910 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.S. Swamy

Abstract In the present work the linear stability analysis of double diffusive convection in a binary fluid layer is performed. The major intention of this study is to investigate the influence of time-periodic vertical vibrations on the onset threshold. A regular perturbation method is used to compute the critical Rayleigh number and wave number. A closed form expression for the shift in the critical Rayleigh number is calculated as a function of frequency of modulation, the solute Rayleigh number, Lewis number, and Prandtl number. These parameters are found to have a significant influence on the onset criterion; therefore the effective control of convection is achieved by proper tuning of these parameters. Vertical vibrations are found to enhance the stability of a binary fluid layer heated and salted from below. The results of this study are useful in the areas of crystal growth in micro-gravity conditions and also in material processing industries where vertical vibrations are involved


1967 ◽  
Vol 29 (2) ◽  
pp. 337-347 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. G. Currie

A horizontal fluid layer whose lower surface temperature is made to vary with time is considered. The stability analysis for this situation shows that the criterion for the onset of instability in a fluid layer which is being heated from below, depends on both the method and the rate of heating. For a fluid layer with two rigid boundaries, the minimum Rayleigh number corresponding to the onset of instability is found to be 1340. For slower heating rates the critical Rayleigh number increases to a maximum value of 1707·8, while for faster heating rates the critical Rayleigh number increases without limit.Two specific types of heating are investigated in detail, constant flux heating and linearly varying surface temperature. These cases correspond closely to situations for which published data exist. The results are in good qualitative agreement.


1984 ◽  
Vol 146 ◽  
pp. 115-125 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. H. Busse ◽  
E. W. Bolton

The stability properties of steady two-dimensional solutions describing convection in a horizontal fluid layer heated from below with stress-free boundaries are investigated in the neighbourhood of the critical Rayleigh number. The region of stable convection rolls as a function of the wavenumber α and the Rayleigh number R is bounded towards higher α by the monotonic skewed varicose instability, while towards low wavenumbers stability is limited by the zigzag instability or by the oscillatory skewed varicose instability. Only for a limited range of Prandtl numbers, 0·543 < P < ∞, does a finite domain of stability exist. In particular, convection rolls with the critical wavenumber αc are always unstable.


Author(s):  
M M Sorour ◽  
M A Hassab ◽  
F A Elewa

The linear stability theory is applied to study the effect of suction on the stability criteria of a horizontal fluid layer confined between two thin porous surfaces heated from below. This investigation covers a wide range of Reynolds number 0 ≥ Re ≥ 30, and Prandtl number 0.72 ≥ Pr ≥ 100. The results show that the critical Rayleigh number increases with Peclet number, and is independent of Pr as far as Re < 3. However, for Re > 3 the critical Rayleigh number is function of both Pr and Pe. In addition, the analysis is extended to study the effect of suction on the stability of two special superimposed fluid layers. The results in the latter case indicate a more stabilizing effect. Furthermore, the effect of thermal boundary conditions is also investigated.


2000 ◽  
Vol 55 (11-12) ◽  
pp. 957-966 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. K. Bhatia ◽  
B. S. Bhadauria

Abstract The linear stability problem for a fluid in a classic Benard configuration is considered. The applied temperature gradient is the sum of a steady component and a time-dependent periodic component. Only infinitesimal disturbances are considered. The time-dependent perturbation is expressed in Fourier series. The shift in critical Rayleigh number is calculated and the modulating effect of the oscillatory temperature gradient on the stability of the fluid layer is examined. Some comparison is made with known results.


1987 ◽  
Vol 185 ◽  
pp. 205-234 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. W. Walden ◽  
Paul Kolodner ◽  
A. Passner ◽  
C. M. Surko

Heat-transport measurements are reported for thermal convection in a rectangular box of aspect’ ratio 10 x 5. Results are presented for Rayleigh numbers up to 35Rc, Prandtl numbers between 2 and 20, and wavenumbers between 0.6 and 1.0kc, where Rc and kc are the critical Rayleigh number and wavenumber for the onset of convection in a layer of infinite lateral extent. The measurements are in good agreement with a phenomenological model which combines the calculations of Nusselt number, as a function of Rayleigh number and roll wavenumber for two-dimensional convection in an infinite layer, with a nonlinear amplitude-equation model developed to account for sidewell attenuation. The appearance of bimodal convection increases the heat transport above that expected for simple parallel-roll convection.


1998 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 73-90 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Vadasz ◽  
Saneshan Govender

The stability and onset of two-dimensional convection in a rotating fluid saturated porous layer subject to gravity and centrifugal body forces is investigated analytically. The problem corresponding to a layer placed far away from the centre of rotation was identified as a distinct case and therefore justifying special attention. The stability of a basic gravity driven convection is analysed. The marginal stability criterion is established in terms of a critical centrifugal Rayleigh number and a critical wave number for different values of the gravity related Rayleigh number. For any given value of the gravity related Rayleigh number there is a transitional value of the wave number, beyond which the basic gravity driven flow is stable. The results provide the stability map for a wide range of values of the gravity related Rayleigh number, as well as the corresponding flow and temperature fields.


Author(s):  
Y. P. Razi ◽  
M. Mojtabi ◽  
K. Maliwan ◽  
M. C. Charrier-Mojtabi ◽  
A. Mojtabi

This paper concerns the thermal stability analysis of porous layer saturated by a binary fluid under the influence of mechanical vibration. The linear stability analysis of this thermal system leads us to study the following damped coupled Mathieu equations: BH¨+B(π2+k2)+1H˙+(π2+k2)−k2k2+π2RaT(1+Rsinω*t*)H=k2k2+π2(NRaT)(1+Rsinω*t*)Fε*BF¨+Bπ2+k2Le+ε*F˙+π2+k2Le−k2k2+π2NRaT(1+Rsinω*t*)F=k2k2+π2RaT(1+Rsinω*t*)H where RaT is thermal Rayleigh number, R is acceleration ratio (bω2/g), Le is the Lewis number, k is the dimensionless wave-number, ε* is normalized porosity and N is the buoyancy ratio (H and F are perturbations of temperature and concentration fields). In the follow up, the non-linear behavior of the problem is studied via a generalization of the Lorenz model (five coupled non-linear differential equations with periodic coefficients). In the presence or absence of gravity, the stability limit for the onset of stationary as well as Hopf bifurcations is determined.


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