Computations of Marangoni convection are usually performed in two-or threedimensional domains with rigid boundaries. In two dimensions, allowing the free surface to deform can result in a solution set with a qualitatively different bifurcation structure. We describe a finite-element technique for ca
Two-Fluid Marangoni–Bénard Convection with a Deformable Interface
✍ Scribed by S.J. Tavener; K.A. Cliffe
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2002
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 214 KB
- Volume
- 182
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9991
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Two immiscible fluid layers that are subjected to a temperature gradient perpendicular to their interface exhibit a range of behaviors that is considerably richer than for the single-fluid case. We describe a numerical technique for calculating thermally driven flows in two fluid layers which uses a simple technique based on a Landau transformation to map the physical domain into a reference domain, enabling the unknown location of the deformable interface to be determined. The coupled system of nonlinear partial differential equations, comprising mapping, continuity, momentum, and energy equations and the appropriate boundary conditions, is solved using the finite-element method in two-dimensional domains. Numerical bifurcation techniques are used to investigate the multiplicity of the solution set. The case of heating from above is considered in some detail and the results of finite-element computations are compared with linear stability calculations performed on unbounded domains. The principal advantages of the finite-element approach are the ability to determine the effect of non-90 • contact angles (when the conducting solution no longer exists and traditional linear stability approaches fail), the ability to determine the role of finite aspect ratio domains and the relative volume fractions of the two fluids, and the capability of calculating the nonlinear development of flows beyond the critical temperature gradient.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
The thermal Marangoni instability of a fluid film coating a deformable membrane has been investigated by taking into account the deformation of the fluid free surface. Numerical calculations for different thermal boundary conditions are presented. The prestressed membrane is supposed to be very thin
## Abstract A new interface reconstruction method in 3D is presented. The method involves a conservative level‐contour reconstruction coupled to a cubic‐Bézier interpolation. The use of the proposed piecewise linear interface calculation (PLIC) reconstruction scheme coupled to a multidimensional ti