Focus on Fluids
Virtual motion of real particles
- G. TRYGGVASON
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 20 April 2010, pp. 1-4
-
- Article
-
- You have access Access
- Export citation
-
Direct numerical simulations are rapidly becoming one of the most important techniques to examine the dynamics of multiphase flows. Lucci, Ferrante & Elghobashi (J. Fluid Mech., 2010, this issue, vol. 650, pp. 5–55) address several fundamental issues for spherical particles in isotropic turbulence. They show the importance of including the finite size of the particles and discuss how particles of a size comparable to the largest length scale at which viscosity substantially affects the turbulent eddies (i.e. the Taylor microscale) always increase the dissipation of turbulent kinetic energy.
Papers
Modulation of isotropic turbulence by particles of Taylor length-scale size
- FRANCESCO LUCCI, ANTONINO FERRANTE, SAID ELGHOBASHI
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 19 March 2010, pp. 5-55
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
This study investigates the two-way coupling effects of finite-size solid spherical particles on decaying isotropic turbulence using direct numerical simulation with an immersed boundary method. We fully resolve all the relevant scales of turbulence around freely moving particles of the Taylor length-scale size, 1.2≤d/λ≤2.6. The particle diameter and Stokes number in terms of Kolmogorov length- and time scales are 16≤d/η≤35 and 38≤τp/τk≤178, respectively, at the time the particles are released in the flow. The particles mass fraction range is 0.026≤φm≤1.0, corresponding to a volume fraction of 0.01≤φv≤0.1 and density ratio of 2.56≤ρp/ρf≤10. The maximum number of dispersed particles is 6400 for φv=0.1. The typical particle Reynolds number is of O(10). The effects of the particles on the temporal development of turbulence kinetic energy E(t), its dissipation rate (t), its two-way coupling rate of change Ψp(t) and frequency spectra E(ω) are discussed.
In contrast to particles with d < η, the effect of the particles in this study, with d > η, is that E(t) is always smaller than that of the single-phase flow. In addition, Ψp(t) is always positive for particles with d > η, whereas it can be positive or negative for particles with d < η.
Can swell increase the number of freak waves in a wind sea?
- ODIN GRAMSTAD, KARSTEN TRULSEN
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 19 March 2010, pp. 57-79
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
The effect of a swell on the statistical distribution of a directional short-wave field is investigated. Starting from Zakharov's spectral formulation, we derive a new modified nonlinear Schrödinger equation appropriate for the nonlinear evolution of a narrow-banded spectrum of short waves influenced by a swell. The swell-modified equation is solved analytically to yield an extended version of the result of Longuet-Higgins & Stewart (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 8, no. 4, 1960, pp. 565–583) for the modulation of a short wave riding on a longer wave. Numerical Monte Carlo simulations of the long-term evolution of a spectrum of short waves in the presence of a monochromatic swell are employed to extract statistical distributions of freak waves among the short waves. We find evidence that a realistic short-crested wind sea can on average experience a small increase in freak wave probability because of a swell provided the swell is not orthogonal to the wind waves. For orthogonal swell and wind waves we find evidence that there is almost no significant change in the probability of freak waves in the wind sea. If the short waves are unrealistically long crested, such that the Benjamin–Feir index serves as indicator for freak waves (Gramstad & Trulsen, J. Fluid Mech., vol. 582, 2007, pp. 463–472), it appears that the swell has much smaller relative influence on the probability of freak waves than in the short-crested case.
Wave processes in a viscous shock layer and control of fluctuations
- A. A. MASLOV, S. G. MIRONOV, A. N. KUDRYAVTSEV, T. V. POPLAVSKAYA, I. S. TSYRYULNIKOV
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 18 March 2010, pp. 81-118
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
Generation and development of disturbances in a hypersonic viscous shock layer on a flat plate is studied both experimentally and numerically. The study is performed at the Mach number M∞ = 21 and the Reynolds number ReL = 1.44 × 105 and is aimed at elucidating the physical mechanisms that govern the receptivity and instability of the shock layer at extremely high hypersonic velocities. The experiments are conducted in a hypersonic nitrogen-driven wind tunnel. An electron-beam fluorescence technique, a Pitot probe and a piezoceramic transducer are used to measure the mean density and Mach number contours, as well as density and pressure fluctuations, their spectra and spatial distributions in the shock layer. Direct numerical simulations are performed by solving the Navier–Stokes equations with a high-order shock-capturing scheme in a computational domain including the leading and trailing edges of the plate, so that the bow shock wave and the wake behind the plate are also simulated. It is demonstrated that computational and experimental data characterizing the mean flow field, intensity of density fluctuations and their spatial distributions in the shock layer are in close agreement. It is found that excitation of the shock layer by external acoustic waves leads to generation of entropy–vortex disturbances with two maxima of density fluctuations: directly behind the shock wave and on the external edge of the boundary layer. At the same time, the pressure fluctuations decay inward into the shock layer, away from the shock, which agrees with the linear theory of interaction of shock waves with small perturbations. Thus, the entropy–vortex disturbances are shown to dominate in the hypersonic shock layer at very high Mach numbers, in contrast with the boundary layers at moderate hypersonic velocities where acoustic modes are most important. A parametric numerical study of wave processes in the shock layer induced by external acoustic waves is performed with variations of frequency, amplitude and angle of propagation of external disturbances. The amplitude of generated disturbances is observed to grow and decay periodically along the streamwise coordinate, and the characteristics of these variations depend on the frequency and direction of incident acoustic waves. The hypersonic shock layer excited by periodic blowing and suction near the leading edge is also investigated; in the experiments, this type of excitation is obtained by using an oblique-cut whistle. It is shown that blowing/suction generates disturbances resembling those generated by external acoustic waves, with similar spatial distributions and phase velocities. This result paves the way for active control of instability development in the shock layer by means of destructive interference of two types of disturbances. Numerical simulations are performed to show that instability waves can be significantly amplified or almost entirely suppressed, depending on the relative phase of blowing/suction and acoustic disturbances. Wind-tunnel experiments completely confirm this numerical prediction. Thus, the feasibility of delaying instability development in the hypersonic shock layer has been demonstrated for the first time.
Formation of turbulent patterns near the onset of transition in plane Couette flow
- Y. DUGUET, P. SCHLATTER, D. S. HENNINGSON
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 22 March 2010, pp. 119-129
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
The formation of turbulent patterns in plane Couette flow is investigated near the onset of transition, using numerical simulation in a very large domain of size 800 h × 2 h × 356 h. Based on a maximum observation time of 20 000 inertial units, the threshold for the appearance of sustained turbulent motion is Rec = 324 ± 1. For Rec < Re ≤ 380, turbulent-banded patterns form, irrespective of whether the initial perturbation is a noise or localized disturbance. Measurements of the turbulent fraction versus Re show evidence for a discontinuous phase transition scenario where turbulent spots play the role of the nuclei. Using a smaller computational box, the angle selection of the turbulent bands in the early stages of their development is shown to be related to the amplitude of the initial perturbation.
Direct-simulation-based study of turbulent flow over various waving boundaries
- DI YANG, LIAN SHEN
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 24 March 2010, pp. 131-180
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
We use direct numerical simulation of stress-driven turbulent Couette flows over waving surfaces to study turbulence in the vicinity of water waves. Mechanistic study is performed through systematic investigation of different wavy surface conditions including plane progressive Airy and Stokes waves with and without wind-induced surface drift, as well as stationary wavy walls and vertically waving walls for comparison. Two different wave steepness values ak = 0.1 and 0.25 are considered, where a is the wave amplitude and k is the wavenumber. For effects of wave age, defined as the ratio between the wave phase speed c and the turbulence friction velocity u*, we consider three values, namely c/u* = 2, 14 and 25, corresponding to slow, intermediate and fast waves, respectively. Detailed analysis of turbulence structure and statistics shows their dependence on the above-mentioned parameters. Our result agrees with previous measurement and simulation results and reveals many new features unreported in the literature. Over progressive waves, although no apparent flow separation is found in mean flow, considerable intermittent separations in instantaneous flow are detected in slow waves with large steepness. The near-surface coherent vortical structures are examined. We propose two conceptual vortex structure models: quasi-streamwise and reversed horseshoe vortices for slow waves and bent quasi-streamwise vortices for intermediate and fast waves. Detailed examination of Reynolds stress with quadrant analysis, turbulent kinetic energy (TKE) and TKE budget with a focus on production shows large variation with wave phase; analysis shows that the variation is highly dependent on wave age and wave nonlinearity. Comparison between Airy waves and Stokes waves indicates that although the nonlinearity of surface water waves is a high-order effect compared with the wave age and wave steepness, it still makes an appreciable difference to the turbulence structure. The effect of wave nonlinearity on surface pressure distribution causes substantial difference in the wave growth rate. Wind-induced surface drift can cause a phase shift in the downstream direction and a reduction in turbulence intensity; this effect is appreciable for slow waves but negligible for intermediate and fast waves. In addition to providing detailed information on the turbulence field in the vicinity of wave surfaces, the results obtained in this study suggest the importance of including wave dynamics in the study of wind–wave interaction.
Global three-dimensional optimal disturbances in the Blasius boundary-layer flow using time-steppers
- ANTONIOS MONOKROUSOS, ESPEN ÅKERVIK, LUCA BRANDT, DAN S. HENNINGSON
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 18 March 2010, pp. 181-214
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
The global linear stability of the flat-plate boundary-layer flow to three-dimensional disturbances is studied by means of an optimization technique. We consider both the optimal initial condition leading to the largest growth at finite times and the optimal time-periodic forcing leading to the largest asymptotic response. Both optimization problems are solved using a Lagrange multiplier technique, where the objective function is the kinetic energy of the flow perturbations and the constraints involve the linearized Navier–Stokes equations. The approach proposed here is particularly suited to examine convectively unstable flows, where single global eigenmodes of the system do not capture the downstream growth of the disturbances. In addition, the use of matrix-free methods enables us to extend the present framework to any geometrical configuration. The optimal initial condition for spanwise wavelengths of the order of the boundary-layer thickness are finite-length streamwise vortices exploiting the lift-up mechanism to create streaks. For long spanwise wavelengths, it is the Orr mechanism combined with the amplification of oblique wave packets that is responsible for the disturbance growth. This mechanism is dominant for the long computational domain and thus for the relatively high Reynolds number considered here. Three-dimensional localized optimal initial conditions are also computed and the corresponding wave packets examined. For short optimization times, the optimal disturbances consist of streaky structures propagating and elongating in the downstream direction without significant spreading in the lateral direction. For long optimization times, we find the optimal disturbances with the largest energy amplification. These are wave packets of Tollmien–Schlichting waves with low streamwise propagation speed and faster spreading in the spanwise direction. The pseudo-spectrum of the system for real frequencies is also computed with matrix-free methods. The spatial structure of the optimal forcing is similar to that of the optimal initial condition, and the largest response to forcing is also associated with the Orr/oblique wave mechanism, however less so than in the case of the optimal initial condition. The lift-up mechanism is most efficient at zero frequency and degrades slowly for increasing frequencies. The response to localized upstream forcing is also discussed.
Energy dissipation in microfluidic beam resonators
- JOHN E. SADER, THOMAS P. BURG, SCOTT R. MANALIS
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 22 March 2010, pp. 215-250
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
The fluid–structure interaction of resonating microcantilevers immersed in fluid has been widely studied and is a cornerstone in nanomechanical sensor development. In many applications, fluid damping imposes severe limitations by strongly degrading the signal-to-noise ratio of measurements. Recently, Burg et al. (Nature, vol. 446, 2007, pp. 1066–1069) proposed an alternative type of microcantilever device whereby a microfluidic channel was embedded inside the cantilever with vacuum outside. Remarkably, it was observed that energy dissipation in these systems was almost identical when air or liquid was passed through the channel and was 4 orders of magnitude lower than that in conventional microcantilever systems. Here, we study the fluid dynamics of these devices and present a rigorous theoretical model corroborated by experimental measurements to explain these observations. In so doing, we elucidate the dominant physical mechanisms giving rise to the unique features of these devices. Significantly, it is found that energy dissipation is not a monotonic function of fluid viscosity, but exhibits oscillatory behaviour, as fluid viscosity is increased/decreased. In the regime of low viscosity, inertia dominates the fluid motion inside the cantilever, resulting in thin viscous boundary layers – this leads to an increase in energy dissipation with increasing viscosity. In the high-viscosity regime, the boundary layers on all surfaces merge, leading to a decrease in dissipation with increasing viscosity. Effects of fluid compressibility also become significant in this latter regime and lead to rich flow behaviour. A direct consequence of these findings is that miniaturization does not necessarily result in degradation in the quality factor, which may indeed be enhanced. This highly desirable feature is unprecedented in current nanomechanical devices and permits direct miniaturization to enhance sensitivity to environmental changes, such as mass variations, in liquid.
Landslide tsunamis propagating around a conical island
- E. RENZI, P. SAMMARCO
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 18 March 2010, pp. 251-285
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
An analytical forced two-horizontal-dimension model is derived to investigate landslide tsunamis propagating around a conical island lying on a flat continental platform. Separation of variables and Laplace transform are used to obtain the free-surface elevation in the whole domain and the runup at the shoreline in terms of confluent Heun functions. The main properties of these functions and their asymptotic behaviour for large parameters are investigated. Expression of the transient leading wave travelling offshore is also derived. The distinguishing physical features of landslide tsunamis propagating in a round geometry are then pointed out and compared with those of landslide tsunamis propagating along a straight coast. Analytical results satisfactorily agree with available experimental data.
On bubble clustering and energy spectra in pseudo-turbulence
- JULIÁN MARTÍNEZ MERCADO, DANIEL CHEHATA GÓMEZ, DENNIS VAN GILS, CHAO SUN, DETLEF LOHSE
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 24 March 2010, pp. 287-306
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
Three-dimensional particle tracking velocimetry (PTV) and phase-sensitive constant temperature anemometry in pseudo-turbulence – i.e. flow solely driven by rising bubbles – were performed to investigate bubble clustering and to obtain the mean bubble rise velocity, distributions of bubble velocities and energy spectra at dilute gas concentrations (α ≤ 2.2 %). To characterize the clustering the pair correlation function G(r, θ) was calculated. The deformable bubbles with equivalent bubble diameter db = 4–5 mm were found to cluster within a radial distance of a few bubble radii with a preferred vertical orientation. This vertical alignment was present at both small and large scales. For small distances also some horizontal clustering was found. The large number of data points and the non-intrusiveness of PTV allowed well-converged probability density functions (PDFs) of the bubble velocity to be obtained. The PDFs had a non-Gaussian form for all velocity components and intermittency effects could be observed. The energy spectrum of the liquid velocity fluctuations decayed with a power law of −3.2, different from the ≈ −5/3 found for homogeneous isotropic turbulence, but close to the prediction −3 by Lance & Bataille (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 222, 1991, p. 95) for pseudo-turbulence.
Direct numerical simulation of separated flow in a three-dimensional diffuser
- JOHAN OHLSSON, PHILIPP SCHLATTER, PAUL F. FISCHER, DAN S. HENNINGSON
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 19 March 2010, pp. 307-318
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
A direct numerical simulation (DNS) of turbulent flow in a three-dimensional diffuser at Re = 10000 (based on bulk velocity and inflow-duct height) was performed with a massively parallel high-order spectral element method running on up to 32768 processors. Accurate inflow condition is ensured through unsteady trip forcing and a long development section. Mean flow results are in good agreement with experimental data by Cherry et al. (Intl J. Heat Fluid Flow, vol. 29, 2008, pp. 803–811), in particular the separated region starting from one corner and gradually spreading to the top expanding diffuser wall. It is found that the corner vortices induced by the secondary flow in the duct persist into the diffuser, where they give rise to a dominant low-speed streak, due to a similar mechanism as the ‘lift-up effect’ in transitional shear flows, thus governing the separation behaviour. Well-resolved simulations of complex turbulent flows are thus possible even at realistic Reynolds numbers, providing accurate and detailed information about the flow physics. The available Reynolds stress budgets provide valuable references for future development of turbulence models.
Drag reduction of flexible plates by reconfiguration
- FRÉDÉRICK GOSSELIN, EMMANUEL de LANGRE, BRUNO A. MACHADO-ALMEIDA
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 18 March 2010, pp. 319-341
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
Through an extensive and systematic experimental investigation of two geometries of flexible plates in air, it is shown that a properly defined scaled Cauchy number allows collapsing all drag measurements of the reconfiguration number. In the asymptotic regime of large deformation, it is shown that the Vogel exponents that scale the drag with the flow velocity for different geometries of plates can be predicted with a simple dimensional analysis reasoning. These predicted Vogel exponents are in agreement with previously published models of reconfiguration. The mechanisms responsible for reconfiguration, namely area reduction and streamlining, are studied with the help of a simple model for flexible plates based on an empirical drag formulation. The model predicts well the reconfiguration observed in the experiments and shows that for a rectangular plate, the effect of streamlining is prominent at the onset of reconfiguration, but area reduction dominates in the regime of large deformation. Additionally, the model demonstrates for both geometries of plates that the reconfiguration cannot be described by a single value of the Vogel exponent. The Vogel exponent asymptotically approaches constant values for small and for very large scaled Cauchy numbers, but in between both extremes it varies significantly over a large range of scaled Cauchy number.
Flow-induced vibrations of a deformable ring
- KOUROSH SHOELE, QIANG ZHU
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 16 March 2010, pp. 343-362
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
To understand flow-induced vibrations of deformable objects, we numerically investigate dynamics of a pressurized elastic ring pinned at one point within a uniform flow by using an immersed-boundary algorithm. The boundary of the ring consists of a fibre with no bending stiffness, which can be modelled as a linear spring with spring constant k and zero unstretched length. The vibration of the ring is decomposed into two parts: a pitching motion that includes a rigid-body rotation and a flexible bending motion in the transverse direction, and a tapping motion in the longitudinal direction. The pitching motion is dominated by the frequency of vortex shedding, whereas the primary frequency of the tapping motion is twice the frequency of vortex shedding. At the Reynolds number of 100, resonance is observed when k ~ 0.2 (k is normalized by the diameter of the undeformed ring, the speed of the upcoming flow and the fluid density). Across the resonance region, abrupt jumps in terms of the motion amplitudes as well as the hydrodynamic loads are recorded. Within the resonance region, the lift force demonstrates a beating phenomenon reminiscent of findings through reduced models and low-degree-of-freedom systems.
Interfacial instability due to evaporation and convection: linear and nonlinear analyses
- W. GUO, R. NARAYANAN
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 15 March 2010, pp. 363-389
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
Interfacial instability arising from evaporation of a single component liquid is investigated using linear and weakly nonlinear analysis. Evaporative convection is studied taking into account the fluid dynamics of both liquid and vapour phases as well as lateral rigid sidewalls. Both open and closed systems are addressed. The nature of the bifurcation and the change in heat flux in the nonlinear regime are determined. It is shown that depending upon the aspect ratio of the geometry, either supercritical or subcritical branching behaviour is possible.
Stochastic bifurcation analysis of Rayleigh–Bénard convection
- DANIELE VENTURI, XIAOLIANG WAN, GEORGE EM KARNIADAKIS
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 06 April 2010, pp. 391-413
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
Stochastic bifurcations and stability of natural convection within two-dimensional square enclosures are investigated by different stochastic modelling approaches. Deterministic stability analysis is carried out first to obtain steady-state solutions and primary bifurcations. It is found that multiple stable steady states coexist, in agreement with recent results, within specific ranges of Rayleigh number. Stochastic simulations are then conducted around bifurcation points and transitional regimes. The influence of random initial flow states on the development of supercritical convection patterns is also investigated. It is found that a multi-element polynomial chaos method captures accurately the onset of convective instability as well as multiple convection patterns corresponding to random initial flow states.
Hovering of a rigid pyramid in an oscillatory airflow
- ANNIE WEATHERS, BRENDAN FOLIE, BIN LIU, STEPHEN CHILDRESS, JUN ZHANG
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 19 March 2010, pp. 415-425
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
We investigate the dynamics of rigid bodies (hollow ‘pyramids’) placed within a background airflow, oscillating with zero mean. The asymmetry of the body introduces a net upward force. We find that when the amplitude of the airflow is above a threshold, the net lift exceeds the weight and the object starts to hover. Our results show that the objects hover at far smaller air amplitudes than would be required by a quasi-steady theory, although this theory accounts qualitatively for the behaviour of the system as the body mass becomes small.
Resonance and trapping of topographic transient ocean waves generated by a moving atmospheric disturbance
- ROSS VENNELL
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 16 March 2010, pp. 427-442
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
Proudman resonance amplifies the oceanic forced wave beneath moving atmospheric pressure disturbances. The amplification varies with water depth; consequently, the forced wave beneath a disturbance crossing topography radiates transient free waves. Transients are shown to magnify the effects of Proudman resonance for disturbances crossing the coast or shelf at particular angles. A Snell like reflection law gives rise to a type of resonance for relatively slow moving disturbances crossing a coast in an otherwise flat-bottomed ocean. This occurs for translation speeds less than the shallow water wave speed for disturbances approaching the coast at a critical angle given by the inverse sine of the Froude number of the disturbance. A disturbance crossing the shelf at particular angles can also excite seiche modes of the shelf via generation of a transient at the continental slope. Beyond a typically small angle of incidence, transients generated by a disturbance crossing the continental slope and coast will be trapped on the shelf by internal reflection. The refraction law for a fast-moving forced wave crossing an ocean ridge at greater than a small angle of incidence also results in trapped free-wave transients with tsunami-like periods propagating along the ridge. The subcritical resonance, excitation of shelf modes and trapping of the transients may have implications for storm surges and the generation of destructive meteotsunami.
A structure-based model for turbulent-boundary-layer wall pressures
- B.-K. AHN, W. R. GRAHAM, S. A. RIZZI
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 16 March 2010, pp. 443-478
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
Practical prediction of structural vibrations due to a turbulent boundary layer currently depends on empirical representations of the unsteady wall pressures. Improvements in these representations would be greatly facilitated if a simple, physically based model were available to test ad hoc assumptions and provide rigorous interpolation of experimental data. A possible candidate is the attached-eddy model, developed from Townsend's initial ideas by Perry and co-workers in the context of turbulence velocity spectra. This approach employs the superposition of contributions from individual ‘eddies’, of varying size, to yield its predictions. It is shown here that the same methodology can be applied for wall pressures, once the field due to an eddy has been obtained via solution of the governing Poisson equation. Comparisons with large-eddy simulation and experimental data, spanning a two-decade Reynolds number range, show remarkably good agreement, given the simplicity of the model. It is concluded that this approach has the potential to provide useful physical insight and, subject to its extension to a time-resolved form, improvements to existing empirical formulations.
Stokes' cradle: normal three-body collisions between wetted particles
- C. M. DONAHUE, C. M. HRENYA, R. H. DAVIS, K. J. NAKAGAWA, A. P. ZELINSKAYA, G. G. JOSEPH
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 31 March 2010, pp. 479-504
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
In this work, a combination of experiments and theory is used to investigate three-body normal collisions between solid particles with a liquid coating (i.e. ‘wetted’ particles). Experiments are carried out using a Stokes' cradle, an apparatus inspired by the Newton's cradle desktop toy except with wetted particles. Unlike previous work on two-body systems, which may either agglomerate or rebound upon collision, four outcomes are possible in three-body systems: fully agglomerated, Newton's cradle (striker and target particle it strikes agglomerate), reverse Newton's cradle (targets agglomerate while striker separates) and fully separated. Post-collisional velocities are measured over a range of parameters. For all experiments, as the impact velocity increases, the progression of outcomes observed is fully agglomerated, reverse Newton's cradle and fully separated. Notably, as the viscosity of the oil increases, experiments reveal a decrease in the critical Stokes number (the Stokes number that demarcates a transition from agglomeration to separation) for both sets of adjacent particles. A scaling theory is developed based on lubrication forces and particle deformation and elasticity. Unlike previous work for two-particle systems, two pieces of physics are found to be critical in the prediction of a regime map that is consistent with experiments: (i) an additional resistance upon rebound of the target particles due to the pre-existing liquid bridge between them (which has no counterpart in two-particle collisions), and (ii) the addition of a rebound criterion due to glass transition of the liquid layer at high pressure between colliding particles.
Mean zonal flows generated by librations of a rotating spherical cavity
- F. H. BUSSE
-
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 19 March 2010, pp. 505-512
-
- Article
- Export citation
-
Longitudinal librations represent oscillations about the axis of a rotating axisymmetric fluid-filled cavity. An analytical theory is developed for the case of a spherical cavity in the limit when the libration frequency is small in comparison with the rotation rate, but large in comparison with the inverse of the spin-up time. It is shown that longitudinal librations create a steady zonal flow through the nonlinear advection in the Ekman layers. The theory can be applied to laboratory experiments as well as to solid planets and satellites with a liquid core.