Bounds on convective heat transport in a porous layer heated from
below are derived
using the background field variational method (Constantin &
Doering 1995a, b, 1996;
Doering & Constantin 1992, 1994, 1996; Nicodemus, Holthaus & Grossmann
1997a)
based on the technique introduced by Hopf (1941). We consider the infinite
Prandtl–Darcy number model in three spatial dimensions, and additionally
the finite
Prandtl–Darcy number equations in two spatial dimensions, relevant
for the related
Hele-Shaw problem. The background field method is interpreted as a rigorous
implementation of heuristic marginal stability concepts producing rigorous
limits on
the time-averaged convective heat transport, i.e. the Nusselt
number Nu, as a function
of the Rayleigh number Ra. The best upper bound derived here,
although not
uniformly optimal, matches the exact value of Nu up to and immediately
above the
onset of convection with asymptotic behaviour,
Nu[les ]9/256Ra as Ra→∞, exhibiting
the
Howard–Malkus–Kolmogorov–Spiegel scaling anticipated
by classical scaling and
marginally stable boundary layer arguments. The relationship between these
results
and previous works of the same title (Busse & Joseph 1972; Gupta &
Joseph 1973) is
discussed.