Author:
ALBENSOEDER S.,KUHLMANN H. C.
Abstract
The flow in an infinite slab of rectangular cross-section is investigated numerically
by a finite volume method. Two facing walls which move parallel to each other with
the same velocity, but in opposite directions, drive a plane flow in the cross-section
of the slab. A linear stability analysis shows that the two-dimensional flow becomes
unstable to different modes, depending on the cross-sectional aspect ratio, when the
Reynolds number is increased. The critical mode is found to be stationary for all
aspect ratios. When the separation of the moving walls is larger than approximately
twice the height of the cavity, the basic flow forms two vortices, each close to one
of the moving walls. The instability of this flow is of centrifugal type and similar to
that in the classical lid-driven cavity problem with a single moving wall. When the
moving walls are sufficiently close to each other (aspect ratio less than 2) the two
vortices merge and form an elliptically strained vortex. Owing to the dipolar strain
this flow becomes unstable through the elliptic instability. When both moving walls
are very close, the finite-length plane-Couette flow becomes unstable by a similar
elliptic mechanism near both turning zones. The critical mode produces wide streaks
reaching far into the cavity. For a small range of aspect ratios near unity the flow
consists of a single vortex. Here, the strain field is dominated by a four-fold symmetry.
As a result the instability process is analogous to the instability of a Rankine vortex
in an quadripolar strain field, resulting from vortex stretching into the four corners
of the cavity.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
37 articles.
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