4.7 Article

Onset of instabilities in rotating flows by direct numerical simulation

Journal

JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS
Volume 945, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/jfm.2022.566

Keywords

rotating flows; computational methods; shear-flow instability

Funding

  1. US Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Chemical Sciences, Geosciences and Biosciences Division [DE-SC0018676]
  2. U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) [DE-SC0018676] Funding Source: U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)

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A rotating disk is a classic experiment for measuring surface reaction rates in geochemical and electrochemical systems. The study found that the flow becomes time dependent and there is non-uniform mass transfer in the flow around a finite-size disk.
A rotating disk is the canonical experiment for measuring surface reaction rates in geochemical and electrochemical systems. Using the similarity solution for laminar flow around an infinite disk, the mass transfer coefficient can be simply related to the intrinsic reaction rate at the surface. However, measurements of mass transfer rates use a finite-size disk within a larger container of solution; here the flow is no longer strictly laminar, but there must always be some recirculation. Our interest was initially in the assumption of a uniform radial concentration field, how this breaks down near the perimeter of the disk, and what effect that might have on the measured mass transfer rates. However, our numerical simulations suggest that the flow around a finite-size disk becomes time dependent at Reynolds number (Re) below 1000, which is much smaller than the typical values in mass-transfer measurements (Re similar to 10(4)). We observe the formation of coherent structures in the flow, which suggest a non-uniform mass transfer at the disk surface. The rotating-disk flow follows a similar sequence of instabilities to the Taylor-Couette flow: a centrifugal instability leading an axisymmetric, time-invariant flow, followed by a Hopf bifurcation to a time-periodic flow. To minimise the possibility that our results are a numerical artefact, we have also simulated the instability in the stationary boundary layer of a rotor-stator flow, comparing with self-similar solutions at low Re and with spectral methods near the critical Reynolds number.

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