Abstract
Laboratory experiments on the flow of negatively buoyant two-dimensional plumes
adjacent to a wall in a density-stratified environment are described. The flow passes
through several stages, from an inertial jet to a buoyant plume, to a neutrally
buoyant jet, and then a negatively buoyant plume when it overshoots its equilibrium
density. This fluid then ‘springs back’ and eventually occupies an intermediate range
of heights. The flow is primarily characterized by the initial value of the buoyancy
number, B0 = Q0N3/g′02, where Q0 is the initial volume flux per unit width, g′0 is the
initial buoyancy and N is the buoyancy frequency of the environment. Scaled with the
initial equilibrium depth D of the in flowing fluid, the maximum depth of penetration
increases with B0, as does the width of the initial down flow, which is observed to
increase very slowly with distance downward. Observations are made of the profiles of
flow into and away from the plume as a function of height. Various properties of the
flow are compared with predictions from the ‘standard’ two-dimensional entraining
plume model, and this shows generally consistent agreement, although there are
differences in magnitudes and in details. This flow constrasts with flows down gentle
slopes into stratified environments, where two-way exchange of fluid occurs.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
37 articles.
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