Author:
STOKES JASON R.,GRAHAM LACHLAN J. W.,LAWSON NICK J.,BOGER DAVID V.
Abstract
A torsionally driven cavity has been used to examine the influence of elasticity
on the swirling flow of constant-viscosity elastic liquids (Boger fluids). A wealth
of phenomena is observed as the degree of inertia, elasticity and viscous forces
are varied by using a range of low- to high-viscosity flexible polyacrylamide Boger
fluids and a semi-rigid xanthan gum Boger fluid. As the inertia is decreased and
elasticity increased by using polyacrylamide Boger fluids, the circulation rates for
a ‘Newtonian-like’ secondary flow decreases until flow reversal occurs owing to the
increasing magnitude of the primary normal stress difference. For each polyacrylamide
fluid, the flow becomes highly unstable at a critical combination of Reynolds number
and Weissenberg number resulting in a new time-dependent elastic instability. Each
fluid is characterized by a dimensionless elasticity number and a correlation with
Reynolds number is found for the occurrence of the instability. In the elasticity
dominated flow of the polyacrylamide Boger fluids, the instability disrupts the flow
dramatically and causes an increase in the peak axial velocity along the central axis
by as much as 400%. In this case, the core vortex spirals with the primary motion
of fluid and is observed in some cases at Reynolds numbers much less than unity.
Elastic ‘reverse’ flow is observed for the xanthan gum Boger fluid at high Weissenberg
number. As the Weissenberg number decreases, and Reynolds number increases,
counter-rotating vortices flowing in the inertial direction form on the rotating lid.
The peak axial velocity decreases for the xanthan gum Boger fluid with decreasing
Weissenberg number. In addition, several constitutive models are used to describe
accurately the rheological properties of the fluids used in this work in shear and
extensional flow. This experimental investigation of a complex three-dimensional flow
using well-characterized fluids provides the information necessary for the validation
of non-Newtonian constitutive models through numerical analysis of the torsionally
driven cavity flow.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
47 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献