Some studies of fluid mixing and transport

In this thesis we study four problems with potential biological and industrial applications which rely on fluid mixing and transport. The problem of simultaneous ultrafiltration, diffusion and osmosis across a membrane separating two fluids is studied, numerically and asymptotically, as a model for...

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Main Author: Finn, Matthew David
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10041/
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author Finn, Matthew David
author_facet Finn, Matthew David
author_sort Finn, Matthew David
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description In this thesis we study four problems with potential biological and industrial applications which rely on fluid mixing and transport. The problem of simultaneous ultrafiltration, diffusion and osmosis across a membrane separating two fluids is studied, numerically and asymptotically, as a model for an artificial kidney dialyser. Couplings between the different transport mechanisms prove significant in determining overall transport rates. Our model appears to be the first to treat the three transport mechanisms in a spatially structured framework, and shows that previous, spatially averaged models can overestimate transport rates. Our results can be used to optimise dialyser geometry and to profile dialysis sessions. The remainder of this thesis concerns some fundamentals of fluid mixing and mixer design. Techniques for assessing the quality of fluid mixing are reviewed, and applied to a two-dimensional laminar chaotic flow. We find no outright optimum mixing method across the range of measures, suggesting that `sieving' a collection of mixing methods according to increasingly complicated mixing measures may fail to identify a global optimum. `Topological chaos' appears to allow good mixing stretch rate to be built-in to batch mixer design, avoiding the need to tune the mixer parameters, provided a correct flow topology is created. We show that the theoretical stretch rate predictions are achieved quite tightly, in practice in a significant fraction of the flow domain; we investigate the practicalities of topologically chaotic mixers. Finally, we discuss whether topological chaos may also apply to three-dimensional static mixer design, in a braided pipe mixer, in which pipe flow is mixed around carefully designed twisted inner pipes. We expect such a device to mix well if the inner pipes have appropriate topology. However, we demonstrate how three-dimensional flow features can undermine mixing performance.
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spelling nottingham-100412025-02-28T11:06:57Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10041/ Some studies of fluid mixing and transport Finn, Matthew David In this thesis we study four problems with potential biological and industrial applications which rely on fluid mixing and transport. The problem of simultaneous ultrafiltration, diffusion and osmosis across a membrane separating two fluids is studied, numerically and asymptotically, as a model for an artificial kidney dialyser. Couplings between the different transport mechanisms prove significant in determining overall transport rates. Our model appears to be the first to treat the three transport mechanisms in a spatially structured framework, and shows that previous, spatially averaged models can overestimate transport rates. Our results can be used to optimise dialyser geometry and to profile dialysis sessions. The remainder of this thesis concerns some fundamentals of fluid mixing and mixer design. Techniques for assessing the quality of fluid mixing are reviewed, and applied to a two-dimensional laminar chaotic flow. We find no outright optimum mixing method across the range of measures, suggesting that `sieving' a collection of mixing methods according to increasingly complicated mixing measures may fail to identify a global optimum. `Topological chaos' appears to allow good mixing stretch rate to be built-in to batch mixer design, avoiding the need to tune the mixer parameters, provided a correct flow topology is created. We show that the theoretical stretch rate predictions are achieved quite tightly, in practice in a significant fraction of the flow domain; we investigate the practicalities of topologically chaotic mixers. Finally, we discuss whether topological chaos may also apply to three-dimensional static mixer design, in a braided pipe mixer, in which pipe flow is mixed around carefully designed twisted inner pipes. We expect such a device to mix well if the inner pipes have appropriate topology. However, we demonstrate how three-dimensional flow features can undermine mixing performance. 2003 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10041/1/thesis-with-figures.pdf Finn, Matthew David (2003) Some studies of fluid mixing and transport. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Chaotic advection Mixing Stirring Topological Chaos
spellingShingle Chaotic advection
Mixing
Stirring
Topological Chaos
Finn, Matthew David
Some studies of fluid mixing and transport
title Some studies of fluid mixing and transport
title_full Some studies of fluid mixing and transport
title_fullStr Some studies of fluid mixing and transport
title_full_unstemmed Some studies of fluid mixing and transport
title_short Some studies of fluid mixing and transport
title_sort some studies of fluid mixing and transport
topic Chaotic advection
Mixing
Stirring
Topological Chaos
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10041/