Far-Field Turbulent Mixing Efficiency and Large-Scale Outer-Fluid-Interface Dynamics

Author(s):  
Jennifer Nathman ◽  
Roberto Aguirre ◽  
Haris Catrakis
2006 ◽  
Vol 128 (4) ◽  
pp. 874-879 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roberto C. Aguirre ◽  
Jennifer C. Nathman ◽  
Haris C. Catrakis

Flow geometry effects are examined on the turbulent mixing efficiency quantified as the mixture fraction. Two different flow geometries are compared at similar Reynolds numbers, Schmidt numbers, and growth rates, with fully developed turbulence conditions. The two geometries are the round jet and the single-stream planar shear layer. At the flow conditions examined, the jet exhibits an ensemble-averaged mixing efficiency which is approximately double the value for the shear layer. This substantial difference is explained fluid mechanically in terms of the distinct large-scale entrainment and mixing-initiation environments and is therefore directly due to flow geometry effects.


Author(s):  
Richard Bergman ◽  
Alexander Efremov ◽  
Pierre Woehl

Mixing of fluids is a common and often critical step in microfluidic systems. In typical large scale processes turbulence greatly speeds the mixing process. At the mini and micro-scales, however, the flow is laminar and the benefits of turbulent mixing are not present. Mixing at the mini- and micro-scales tends to become a more highly engineered process of bringing fluids together in predictable ways to achieve a predetermined and acceptable level of mixing. This paper summarizes a numerical analysis of the mixing performance of a vaned circular micromixer. A newly developed mixing metric suitable for reacting fluids is developed for this study. Applying the basic steps of stretching, cutting, and stacking to effect mixing, a useful micromixer is analyzed numerically for its mixing efficiency. A parametric study of flow and viscosity indicate that a flow Re of 12 or higher is sufficient to achieve effective and rapid mixing in this device.


1998 ◽  
Vol 354 ◽  
pp. 175-208 ◽  
Author(s):  
DAVID A. BRIGGS ◽  
JOEL H. FERZIGER ◽  
JEFFREY R. KOSEFF ◽  
STEPHEN G. MONISMITH

Direct numerical simulation is used to examine turbulent mixing in a shear-free stably stratified fluid. Energy is continuously supplied to a small region to maintain a well-developed kinetic energy profile, as in an oscillating grid flow (Briggs et al. 1996; Hopfinger & Toly 1976; Nokes 1988). A microscale Reynolds number of 60 is maintained in the source region. The turbulence forms a well-mixed layer which diffuses from the source into the quiescent fluid below. Turbulence transport at the interface causes the mixed layer to grow under weakly stratified conditions. When the stratification is strong, large-scale turbulent transport is inactive and pressure transport becomes the principal mechanism for the growth of the turbulence layer. Down-gradient buoyancy flux is present in the large scales; however, far from the source, weak counter-gradient fluxes appear in the medium to small scales. The production of internal waves and counter-gradient fluxes rapidly reduces the mixing when the turbulent Froude number is lower than unity. When the stratification is weak, the turbulence is strong enough to break up the density interface and transport fluid parcels of different density over large vertical distances. As the stratification intensifies, turbulent eddies flatten against the interface creating anisotropy and internal waves. The dominant entrainment mechanism is then scouring. Mixing efficiency, defined as the ratio of buoyancy flux to available kinetic energy, exhibits a similar dependence on Froude number to other stratified flows (Holt et al. 1992; Lienhard & Van Atta 1990). However, using the anisotropy of the turbulence to define an alternative mixing efficiency and Froude number improves the correlation and allows local scaling.


Author(s):  
Bishakdatta Gayen ◽  
Ross W. Griffiths

Global differences of temperature and buoyancy flux at the ocean surface are responsible for small-scale convection at high latitudes, global overturning, and the top-to-bottom density difference in the oceans. With planetary rotation the convection also contributes to the large-scale horizontal, geostrophic circulation, and it crucially involves a 3D linkage between the geostrophic circulation and vertical overturning. The governing dynamics of such a surface-forced convective flow are fundamentally different from Rayleigh–Bénard convection, and the role of buoyancy forcing in the oceans is poorly understood. Geostrophic balance adds to the constraints on transport in horizontal convection, as illustrated by experiments, theoretical scaling, and turbulence-resolving simulations for closed (mid-latitude) basins and an annulus or reentrant zonal (circumpolar) channel. In these geometries, buoyancy drives either horizontal mid-latitude gyre recirculations or a strong Antarctic Circumpolar Current, respectively, in addition to overturning. At large Rayleigh numbers the release of available potential energy by convection leads to turbulent mixing with a mixing efficiency approaching unity. Turbulence-resolving models are also revealing the relative roles of wind stress and buoyancy when there is mixed forcing, and in future work they need to include the effects of turbulent mixing due to energy input from tides. Expected final online publication date for the Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics, Volume 54 is January 2022. Please see http://www.annualreviews.org/page/journal/pubdates for revised estimates.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gregory Wagner ◽  
Andre Souza ◽  
Adeline Hillier ◽  
Ali Ramadhan ◽  
Raffaele Ferrari

<p>Parameterizations of turbulent mixing in the ocean surface boundary layer (OSBL) are key Earth System Model (ESM) components that modulate the communication of heat and carbon between the atmosphere and ocean interior. OSBL turbulence parameterizations are formulated in terms of unknown free parameters estimated from observational or synthetic data. In this work we describe the development and use of a synthetic dataset called the “LESbrary” generated by a large number of idealized, high-fidelity, limited-area large eddy simulations (LES) of OSBL turbulent mixing. We describe how the LESbrary design leverages a detailed understanding of OSBL conditions derived from observations and large scale models to span the range of realistically diverse physical scenarios. The result is a diverse library of well-characterized “synthetic observations” that can be readily assimilated for the calibration of realistic OSBL parameterizations in isolation from other ESM model components. We apply LESbrary data to calibrate free parameters, develop prior estimates of parameter uncertainty, and evaluate model errors in two OSBL parameterizations for use in predictive ESMs.</p>


2018 ◽  
Vol 45 (18) ◽  
pp. 9765-9773
Author(s):  
Alexander W. Fisher ◽  
Nicholas J. Nidzieko ◽  
Malcolm E. Scully ◽  
Robert J. Chant ◽  
Elias J. Hunter ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

1984 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
pp. 133-140 ◽  
Author(s):  
Albert J. Semtner

A number of processes in the ocean must be modeled properly in order to produce valid estimates of oceanic heat transport, sea-surface temperature, and sea-ice extent in climate studies. These include: wind-driven turbulent mixing and water transport in the surface layer, internal vertical mixing due to several small-scale mechanisms, horizontal and vertical exchanges by mesoscale eddies, mixing along isopycnals, large-scale transport by currents, deep convection in polar regions, and boundary exchanges with atmosphere, ice, and land. Techniques to model these processes are described. Prospects are given for parameterizing the effects of phenomena that cannot be resolved in climate studies, particularly mesoscale eddies. Past simulations of the ocean in climate studies are reviewed. A modeling strategy is outlined for an improved treatment of the ocean, consistent with the computational power soon to be available.


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