Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-dzt6s Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-18T21:46:22.992Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Linearized buoyant motion in a closed container

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 March 2006

M. C. Jischke
Affiliation:
School of Aerospace, Mechanical and Nuclear Engineering, University of Oklahoma
R. T. Doty
Affiliation:
School of Engineering and Technology, McNeese State University

Abstract

An arbitrarily-shaped, closed container completely filled with fluid is considered. It is assumed that the fluid is originally in a stably-stratified state of rest, and that at an initial instant the temperature of the container walls is impulsively changed. The ensuing unsteady laminar motion is found by solving the linearized Boussinesq equations governing buoyancy-driven flows. A ‘boundarylayer/inviscid-interior’ decomposition leads to a modified asymptotic expansion scheme of analysis. The boundary-layer concept is valid only for large values of the Rayleigh number, and, in addition, we limit the Prandtl number to order unity. It is found that the inviscid interior region heats up by means of a convection process that is driven by suction induced by the boundary layer. The inviscid, adiabatic interior responds to a special horizontal ‘average’ value of the container temperature perturbation. The boundary layer smears out, or averages, any circumferential variation in this perturbation, so that the interior, in effect, responds to an isothermal boundary in each horizontal plane. The interior temperature and vertical velocity component are expressed simply in terms of this horizontal ‘average’ container temperature. The horizontal velocity potential is governed by a Poisson equation, whose solution is developed for several specific geometries to illustrate the nature of the flow.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 1975 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

Barcilon, V. & Pedlosky, J. 1967 Linear theory of rotating stratified fluid motions. J. Fluid Mech. 29, 1.Google Scholar
Crabtree, L. F., KÜCHEMANN, D. & Sowerby, L. 1963 In Laminar Boundary Layers(ed. L. Rosenhead) ch. 8) Oxford University Press.
Doty, R. T. 1973 Linearized buoyant motion in a closed container. Ph.D. thesis, University of Oklahoma.
Doty, R. T. & Jischke, M. C. 1974 Linearized buoyant motion due to impulsively heated vertical plate(s). Int. J. Heat Mass Transfer, 16, 1716.Google Scholar
Greenspan, H. P. 1965 On the general theory of contained rotating fluid motions. J. Fluid Mech. 22, 449.Google Scholar
Greenspan, H. P. 1969 The Theory of Rotating Fluids. Cambridge University Press.
Greenspan, H. P. & Howard, L. N. 1963 On a time-dependent motion of rotating fluid. J. Fluid Mech. 17, 385.Google Scholar
Ostrach, S. 1972 Advances in Heat Transfer(ed. J. P. Hartnett and T. F. Irvine), vol. 8. Academic.
Sakurai, T. & Matsuda, T. 1972 A temperature adjustment process in a Boussinesq fluid via a buoyancy-induced meridional circulation. J. Fluid Mech. 54, 419.Google Scholar
Siegmann, W. L. 1971 The spin-down of rotating stratified fluids. J. Fluid Mech. 47, 689.Google Scholar
Veronis, G. 1970 The analogy between rotating and stratified fluids. Ann. Rev. Fluid Mech. 2, 37.Google Scholar