Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-45l2p Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-27T03:07:28.369Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Circulation control in magnetohydrodynamic rotating flows

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 September 2017

V. D. Borisevich*
Affiliation:
National Research Nuclear University MEPhI, 31 Kashirskoe Shosse, Moscow 115409, Russia
E. P. Potanin
Affiliation:
National Research Nuclear University MEPhI, 31 Kashirskoe Shosse, Moscow 115409, Russia National Research Center ‘Kurchatov Institute’, 1 Academician Kurchatov Square, Moscow 123098, Russia
J. Whichello
Affiliation:
University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia
*
Email address for correspondence: VDBorisevich@mephi.ru

Abstract

A model of a laminar viscous conducting flow, near a dielectric disc in a uniform magnetic field and in the presence of external rotation, is considered, where there is a uniform suction and an axial temperature gradient between the flow and the disc’s surface. It is assumed that the parameters of the suction or the magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) interaction are such that the nonlinear inertial terms, related to the circulation flow, are negligible in the differential equations of the MHD boundary layer on a rotating disc. Analysis of the motion and energy equations, taking the dependence of density on temperature into account, is carried out using the Dorodnitsyn transformation. The exact analytical solution for the boundary layer and heat transfer equations is obtained and analysed, neglecting the viscous and Joule dissipation. The dependence of the flow characteristics in the boundary layer on the rate of suction and the magnetic field induction is studied. It is shown that the direction of the radial flow in the boundary layer on a disc can be changed, not only by variation of the ratio between the angular velocities in the external flow and the boundary layer, but also by changing the ratio of the temperatures in these two flows, as well as by varying the hydrodynamic Prandtl number. The approximate calculation of a three-dimensional flow in a rotating cylinder with a braking disc (or lid) is carried out, demonstrating that a magnetic field slows the circulation velocity in a rotating cylinder.

Type
Papers
Copyright
© 2017 Cambridge University Press 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Baker, W. R., Bratenahl, A., DeSilva, A. W. & Kunkel, W. B. 1959 Viscous effects in highly ionized rotating plasmas. In Ionization Phenomena in Gases, Volume II; Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference held August 17–21, at the Institute of Physics in Uppsala, Sweden (ed. Robert Nilsson, N.), North-Holland.Google Scholar
Batchelor, G. K. 1951 Note on a class solutions of the Navier–Stokes equations representing steady rotationally-symmetric flow. Q. J. Mech. Appl. Maths 4, 2941.Google Scholar
Batchelor, G. K. 1958 On steady laminar flow with closed streamlines at large Reynolds number. J. Fluid Mech. 1, 177190.Google Scholar
Borisevich, V. D., Borman, V. D., Sulaberidze, G. A., Tikhomirov, A. V. & Tokmantsev, V. I. 2011 Physical Foundations of Isotope Separation in a Gas Centrifuge (ed. Borman, V. D.), Texbook for Universities. MEPhI Publ. House (in Russian).Google Scholar
Borisevich, V. D. & Potanin, E. P. 1985 Boundary layer on a disk rotating in a uniform axial flow with suction. Fluid Dyn. 20, 647651.Google Scholar
Borisevich, V. D. & Potanin, E. P. 1987 Effect of suction on laminar compressive flow and heat transfer close to a disk rotating in a gas. J. Appl. Mech. Tech. Phys. 28, 207211.Google Scholar
Borisevich, V. D. & Potanin, E. P. 2015 Magnetohydrodynamic phenomena and heat transfer near a rotating disk. J. Engng Phys. Thermophys. 88 (6), 15131521.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chandrasekhar, A. & Nath, G. 1989 Unsteady rotating compressible flow over a rotating infinite disk with a magnetic field. Acta Technica CSAV 1, 5870.Google Scholar
Dorfman, L. A. 1963 Hydrodynamic Resistance and Heat Loss of Rotating Solids. Oliver & Boyd.Google Scholar
Dorodnitsyn, A. A. 1942 Boundary layer in a compressible gas. Z. Angew. Math. Mech. 6, 449486 (in Russian).Google Scholar
Dresvin, S. V. & Amouroux, J. 2007 Heat and mass transfer in plasma jets. In Transport Phenomena in Plasma (ed. Fridman, A. & Cho, Y.), Advances in Heat Transfer, vol. 40. Elsevier/Academic Press.Google Scholar
Duck, P. W. 2012 Spin-up problems of stratified rotating flows inside containers. J. Fluid Mech. 712, 36.Google Scholar
Fetterman, A. J. & Fisch, N. J. 2009 Wave-driven countercurrent plasma centrifuge. Plasma Sources Sci. Technol. 18, 045003.Google Scholar
Flanagan, K., Clark, M., Collins, C., Cooper, C. M., Khalzov, I. V., Wallace, J. & Forest, C. B. 2015 Prospects for observing the magnetorotational instability in the plasma Couette experiment. J. Plasma Phys. 81, 345810401.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gorbachev, L. P. & Potanin, E. P. 1969 Calculation of a MHD-boundary layer on disks. Magnetohydrodynamics 5, 6062.Google Scholar
Jasmine, H. A. & Gajjar, J. S. B. 2005 Convective and absolute instability in the incompressible boundary layer on a rotating disk in the presence of a uniform magnetic field. J. Engng Maths 52 (4), 337353.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ji, H., Goodman, J. & Kageyama, A. 2001 Magnetorotational instability in a rotating liquid metal annulus. Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc. 325, L1.Google Scholar
Khalzov, I. V., Smolyakov, A. I. & Ilgisonis, V. I. 2010 Equilibrium magnetohydrodynamic flows of liquid metals in magnetorotational instability experiments. J. Fluid Mech. 644, 257280.Google Scholar
King, W. S. & Lewellen, W. S. 1964 Boundary layer similarity solutions for rotating flows with and without magnetic interaction. Phys. Fluids 7, 16741680.Google Scholar
Lingwood, R. J. 1995 Absolute instability of the boundary layer on a rotating disk. J. Fluid Mech. 299, 1733.Google Scholar
Lingwood, R. J. 1997 On the effects of suction and injection on the absolute instability of the rotating disk boundary layers. Phys. Fluids 9, 13171328.Google Scholar
Pearson, C. E. 1965 Numerical solutions for the time-dependent, viscous flow between two rotating coaxial disks. J. Fluid Mech. 21, 623633.Google Scholar
Plihon, N. et al. 2015 Flow dynamics and magnetic induction in the von-Kármán plasma experiment. J. Plasma Phys. 81, 345810102.Google Scholar
Potanin, E. P. 2013 Three-dimensional gas flow in a rotating cylinder with a retarding cover. Fluid Dyn. 1, 6876.Google Scholar
Rax, J.-M. & Gueroult, R. 2016 Rotation and instabilities for isotope and mass separation. J. Plasma Phys. 82, 595820504.Google Scholar
Shidlovskii, V. P 1960 Laminar boundary layer on an infinite disk rotating in a gas. Z. Angew. Math. Mech. 24 (1), 161164 (in Russian).Google Scholar
Sparrow, E. M. & Cess, R. D. 1962 Magnetohydrodynamic and heat transfer about a rotating disk. Trans. ASME J. Appl. Mech. 29, 181187.Google Scholar
Thomas, C. & Davies, C. 2013 Global stability of the rotating-disc boundary layer with an axial magnetic field. J. Fluid Mech. 724, 510526.Google Scholar
Tuliszka-Sznitko, E., Zielinski, A. & Majchrowski, W. 2009 LES of the non-isothermal transitional flow in rotating cavity. Intl J. Heat Fluid Flow 30, 534548.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Velikhov, E. P. 1959 Stability of the perfectly conducting fluid flow between rotating cylinders in a magnetic field. Sov. Phys. JETP 9, 995998.Google Scholar
Villani, S.(Ed.) 1979 Uranium Enrichment. Springer.Google Scholar