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Novel stability problems in pipe flows

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dc.contributor.advisor Govindarajan, Rama en_US
dc.contributor.author Sahu, Kirti Chandra en_US
dc.date.accessioned 2012-09-03T06:56:41Z en_US
dc.date.available 2012-09-03T06:56:41Z en_US
dc.date.issued 2007 en_US
dc.identifier.citation Sahu, Kirti Chandra. 2007, Novel stability problems in pipe flows, Ph.D thesis, Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research, Bengaluru en_US
dc.identifier.uri https://libjncir.jncasr.ac.in/xmlui/handle/10572/792 en_US
dc.description Open Access en_US
dc.description.abstract The main objective of this thesis is to study the instability and evaluate the likely mechanisms of transition to turbulence in divergent and small-scale (as discussed below) pipe flows. It was first demonstrated by Reynolds (1883) that pipe flow becomes turbulent at a particular value of a nondimensional parameter which now bears his name. In recent times, this problem has received a lot of renewed attention [Faisst & Eckhardt (2003); Hof et al. (2003); Peixinho & Mullin (2006)]. With many demonstrations [see e.g. Hof et al. (2004)] that pipe flow may be maintained laminar up to high Reynolds numbers (of the order of hundred thousand), an understanding of the effect of variations in geometry and flow conditions are increasingly relevant. Fully developed laminar flow (Hagen-Poiseuille flow) through a straight pipe is linearly stable at any Reynolds number, Re. In this case, nonlinear and transient growth mechanisms drive the transition to turbulence. However Hagen-Poiseuille flow is attained only when the pipe wall is straight and smooth and the pipe is long enough. The length required increases with Reynolds number. There are many variations from these conditions where linear instability can play a significant role in transition to turbulence. Some of these situations are addressed in this thesis. They are, flow through (i) a divergent pipe, (ii) a variety of diverging-converging pipes with constant average radius, (iii) diverging pipes/channels with velocity slip at the wall, and (iv) the entry region of a straight pipe. The instabilities of these spatially developing laminar flows is shown to be fundamentally different from flows that do not vary downstream. We have also studied separation in diverging channels and pipes. It is not in general possible to derive analytical solutions for the laminar flows described above. We obtain the mean flow by solving the steady two-dimensional/axisymmetric Navier-Stokes equations exactly. For the accuracy desired, the computational time required for solving the elliptic equations is very large. A full-multigrid algorithm (FMG) is used to accelerate the convergence. The code is parallelised at the National Aerospace Laboratories, Bangalore. The FMG speeds up the solution by a factor of hundred as compared to many traditional algorithms like Gauss-Seidel and Jacobi iteration technique, and the parallel code (using an eight processor machine) gives a superlinear speed-up of 11 times over a single processor. (i) The laminar flow through a divergent pipe is shown to be linearly unstable at any angle of divergence a, with the instability critical Reynolds number tending to infinity as the angle of divergence goes to zero. At small a (< 1 ) the instability is determined by a parameter S (x) aRe describing the basic flow profile, and the mechanism is inviscid. The flow is linearly unstable to the swirl mode for S > 10. The instability critical Reynolds numbers are surprisingly low, e.g. about 150 for a divergence of 3 , which would suggest a role for such instabilities in the transition to turbulence. For small angles of divergence and high Reynolds numbers, an axisymmetric Jeffery-Hamel vii equation (AJH) is derived to describe the mean flow. At larger angles of divergence (1 or greater) the axisymmetric Navier-Stokes equations are solved directly. The partial differential equations for non-parallel stability are solved as an extended eigenvalue problem by a novel technique. (ii) We then study the effect of local asymmetric convergence/divergence on laminar flow through a pipe of constant average radius. The main finding is that the instability behaviour can be changed dramatically by reversing the direction of flow. This is offered as a possible mechanism that could be operating in small-scale flows, due to the presence of wall roughness. (iii) Fluid dynamics and the role of the walls at small-scale can be very different from that at large scales. We make a minor foray into this regime, by considering the effect of wall slip at Knudsen numbers less than 0:1. Recent studies indicate that a velocity slip at the wall dramatically stabilizes the linear mode in a plane two-dimensional channel, but has very little effect on the algebraic transient growth of disturbances [Lauga & Cossu (2005)]. At microscales, apart from slip, local divergences and convergences of the wall are frequently encountered, here we focus on the effect of divergence. Whereas transient growth is more important in a plane channel, at wall divergences of less than a degree, it is linear instability, taking place two orders of magnitude lower in Reynolds number than in a plane channel, which is dominant. Unlike in a plane channel, the effect of velocity slip at the wall is to reduce stability. Transient growth is shown to be an insignificant player in the process of transition to turbulence. (iv) The laminar velocity profile through a circular pipe is parabolic once the flow is fully developed. However, the distance le required to reach this fully-developed state can be very long, and scales linearly with the Reynolds number, Re, roughly as le=R Re=20, where R is the pipe radius. Therefore high Reynolds number laminar flow through a pipe of limited length may never reach a parabolic state. We show that in such circumstances linear stability can play an important role in transition. We solve for the basic flow exactly, and conduct a non-parallel stability analysis, to show that flow can be linearly unstable even at a Reynolds number of 1000. In contrast to what is expected of a boundary layer type flow, disturbance growth is higher in the core region. Our results are consistent with that of experiment. Earlier theoretical studies predicted critical Reynolds number an order of magnitude higher than that observed in experiment and were in serious disagreement with each other. (v) Some other studies which are in the preliminary stage are described at the end of the thesis. These include the study of pulsatile flow through a straight pipe. Prescribing time periodic velocity profiles at the inlet we have solved the Navier-Stokes equation directly using a full-multigrid algorithm on a parallel machine Venkatesh et al. (2005). We also studied separated flows in the diverging channel/pipe. At higher angles of divergence, we study flow separation in channels and pipes. The size, location and shape of the separated region for divergent angle varying from 0 to 90 degree are discussed in the thesis. In future, we are planning to conduct full non-parallel stability analysis e.g. global stability analysis of such flows without the approximations made in this thesis. en_US
dc.language.iso English en_US
dc.publisher Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research en_US
dc.rights © 2007 JNCASR en_US
dc.subject Novel stability en_US
dc.subject Pipe flows en_US
dc.title Novel stability problems in pipe flows en_US
dc.type Thesis en_US
dc.type.qualificationlevel Doctoral en_US
dc.type.qualificationname Ph.D. en_US
dc.publisher.department Engineering Mechanics Unit en_US


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