Author:
STOKES JASON R.,GRAHAM LACHLAN J. W.,LAWSON NICK J.,BOGER DAVID V.
Abstract
A torsionally driven cavity, consisting of a fully enclosed cylinder with rotating bottom
lid, is used to examine the confined swirling flow of low-viscosity Boger fluids for
situations where inertia dominates the flow field. Flow visualization and the optical
technique of particle image velocimetry (PIV) are used to examine the effect of small
amounts of fluid elasticity on the phenomenon of vortex breakdown. Low-viscosity
Boger fluids are used which consist of dilute concentrations of high molecular weight
polyacrylamide or semi-dilute concentrations of xanthan gum in a Newtonian solvent.
The introduction of elasticity results in a 20% and 40% increase in the minimum
critical aspect ratio required for vortex breakdown to occur using polyacrylamide and
xanthan gum, respectively, at concentrations of 45 p.p.m. When the concentrations of
either polyacrylamide or xanthan gum are raised to 75 p.p.m., vortex breakdown is
entirely suppressed for the cylinder aspect ratios examined. Radial and axial velocity
measurements along the axial centreline show that the alteration in existence domain
is linked to a decrease in the magnitude of the peak in axial velocity along the central
axis. The minimum peak axial velocities along the central axis for the 75 p.p.m.
polyacrylamide and 75 p.p.m. xanthan gum Boger fluids are 67% and 86% lower
in magnitude, respectively, than for the Newtonian fluid at Reynolds number of
Re ≈ 1500–1600. This decrease in axial velocity is associated with the interaction of
elasticity in the governing boundary on the rotating base lid and/or the interaction
of extensional viscosity in areas with high velocity gradients. The low-viscosity Boger
fluids used in this study are rheologically characterized and the steady complex flow
field has well-defined boundary conditions. Therefore, the results will allow validation
of non-Newtonian constitutive models in a numerical model of a torsionally driven
cavity flow.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
53 articles.
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