Author:
KUHLMANN H. C.,WANSCHURA M.,RATH H. J.
Abstract
The steady flow in rectangular cavities is investigated both numerically
and experimentally. The flow is driven by moving two facing walls tangentially
in
opposite
directions. It is found that the basic two-dimensional flow is not always
unique. For
low Reynolds numbers it consists of two separate co-rotating vortices adjacent
to the
moving walls. If the difference in the sidewall Reynolds numbers is large
this flow
becomes unstable to a stationary three-dimensional mode with a long wavelength.
When the aspect ratio is larger than two and both Reynolds numbers are
large, but
comparable in magnitude, a second two-dimensional flow exists. It takes
the form
of a single vortex occupying the whole cavity. This flow is the preferred
state
in the
present experiment. It becomes unstable to a three-dimensional mode that
subdivides
the basic streched vortex flow into rectangular convective cells. The instability
is
supercritical when both sidewall Reynolds numbers are the same. When they
differ
the instability is subcritical. From an energy analysis and from the salient
features
of the three-dimensional flow it is concluded that the mechanism of destabilization
is identical to the destabilization mechanism operative in the elliptical
instability of highly strained vortices.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
133 articles.
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