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Linear stability of natural convection in spherical annuli

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 April 2006

David R. Gardner
Affiliation:
Nuclear Energy Science and Materials Technology, Severe Accident Phenomenology Division, Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM 87185–5800, USA
Rod W. Douglass
Affiliation:
Computational Mechanics Laboratory, Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, NE 68588–0656, USA
Steven A. Trogdon
Affiliation:
Department of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Minnesota-Duluth, Duluth, MN 55812–2496, USA

Abstract

Natural convection in a Boussinesq fluid filling the narrow gap between two isothermal, concentric spheres at different temperatures depends strongly on radius ratio, Prandtl number, and Grashof number. When the inner sphere has a higher temperature than the outer sphere, and for fixed values of radius ratio and Prandtl number, experiments show the flow to be steady and axisymmetric for sufficiently small Grashof number and quasi-periodic and axisymmetric for Grashof numbers greater than a critical value. It is our hypothesis that the observed transition is a flow bifurcation. This hypothesis is examined by solving an appropriate eigenvalue problem. The critical Grashof number, critical eigenvalues, and corresponding eigenvectors are obtained as functions of the radius ratio, Prandtl number, and longitudinal wavenumber. Critical Grashof numbers range from 1.18 × 104 to 2.63 × 103 as Prandtl number Pr increases from zero to 0.7, for radius ratios of 0.900 and 0.950. A transitional Prandtl number Prt exists such that for Pr < Prt the bifurcation is time-periodic and axisymmetric. For Pr > Prt the bifurcation is steady and non-axisymmetric with wavenumber two

A first approximation to the bifurcated flow is obtained using the critical eigenvectors. For Pr < Prt the bifurcation sets in as a cluster of relatively strong cells with alternating directions of rotation. The cells remain fixed in location, but pulsate with time. The cluster moves toward the top of the annulus as Pr increases toward Prt. An important feature of the non-axisymmetric bifurcation for Pr > Prt is a set of four cells located at each pole of the annulus in which the radial velocity alternates direction in moving from any one cell to an adjacent one. For fixed radius ratio, the average Nusselt number at criticality varies only slightly with Prandtl number.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 1990 Cambridge University Press

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