Abstract
Using direct numerical simulations, we investigate the heat transport in bulk and boundary flows separately in rotating Rayleigh–Bénard convection in cylindrical cells. In the bulk we observe a steep scaling relationship between the Nusselt number (
$Nu$
) and the Rayleigh number (
$Ra$
), which is consistent with the results from simulations using periodic boundary conditions. For the boundary flow, we observe a power law
$Nu_{BF}\sim (Ra/Ra_w)^1$
at the leading order, where
$Nu_{BF}$
is the local Nusselt number of the boundary flow and
$Ra_w$
is the onset Rayleigh number of the wall mode. We develop a model using the boundary layer marginal stability theory to explain this power law, and further show that a more precise description of the data can be obtained if a higher-order correction is introduced. A striking finding of our study is the observation of a sharp transition in flow state, manifested by a sudden drop in
$Nu_{BF}$
with a corresponding collapse of the boundary flow coherency. After the transition, the boundary flow breaks into vortices, leading to a reduction in flow coherency and heat transport efficiency. As the physical properties of the vortices should not depend on the aspect ratio,
$Nu_{BF}$
for all aspect ratios collapse together after the transition. Moreover, the centrifugal force helps trigger the breakdown of the coherent boundary flow state. For this reason,
$Nu_{BF}$
for the cases with non-zero centrifugal force collapse together. We further develop a method that enables us to separate the contributions from the bulk and boundary flows in the global Nusselt number using only the global
$Nu$
and it does not require the centrifugal force to be absent.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics,Applied Mathematics