On the formation of axial corner vortices during spin-up in a cylinder of square cross-section

We present experimental and theoretical results for the adjustment of a fluid (homogeneous or linearly stratified), which is initially rotating as a solid body with angular frequency Ω−ΔΩ, to a nonlinear increase ΔΩ in the angular frequency of all bounding surfaces. The fluid is contained in a cylin...

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Main Authors: Munro, Richard J., Hewitt, R.E, Foster, M.R.
Format: Article
Published: Cambridge University Press 2015
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Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33544/
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author Munro, Richard J.
Hewitt, R.E
Foster, M.R.
author_facet Munro, Richard J.
Hewitt, R.E
Foster, M.R.
author_sort Munro, Richard J.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description We present experimental and theoretical results for the adjustment of a fluid (homogeneous or linearly stratified), which is initially rotating as a solid body with angular frequency Ω−ΔΩ, to a nonlinear increase ΔΩ in the angular frequency of all bounding surfaces. The fluid is contained in a cylinder of square cross-section which is aligned centrally along the rotation axis, and we focus on the O(Ro−1Ω−1) time scale, where Ro=ΔΩ/Ω is the Rossby number. The flow development is shown to be dominated by unsteady separation of a viscous sidewall layer, leading to an eruption of vorticity that becomes trapped in the four vertical corners of the container. The longer-time evolution on the standard ‘spin-up’ time scale, E−1/2Ω−1 (where E is the associated Ekman number), has been described in detail for this geometry by Foster & Munro (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 712, 2012, pp. 7–40), but only for small changes in the container’s rotation rate (i.e. Ro≪1). In the linear case, for Ro≪E1/2≪1, there is no sidewall separation. In the present investigation we focus on the fully nonlinear problem, Ro=O(1), for which the sidewall viscous layers are Prandtl boundary layers and (somewhat unusually) periodic around the container’s circumference. Some care is required in the corners of the container, but we show that the sidewall boundary layer breaks down (separates) shortly after an impulsive change in rotation rate. These theoretical boundary-layer results are compared with two-dimensional Navier–Stokes results which capture the eruption of vorticity, and these are in turn compared to laboratory observations and data. The experiments show that when the Burger number, S=(N/Ω)2 (where N is the buoyancy frequency), is relatively large – corresponding to a strongly stratified fluid – the flow remains (horizontally) two-dimensional on the O(Ro−1Ω−1) time scale, and good quantitative predictions can be made by a two-dimensional theory. As S was reduced in the experiments, three-dimensional effects were observed to become important in the core of each corner vortex, on this time scale, but only after the breakdown of the sidewall layers.
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spelling nottingham-335442020-05-04T17:07:27Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33544/ On the formation of axial corner vortices during spin-up in a cylinder of square cross-section Munro, Richard J. Hewitt, R.E Foster, M.R. We present experimental and theoretical results for the adjustment of a fluid (homogeneous or linearly stratified), which is initially rotating as a solid body with angular frequency Ω−ΔΩ, to a nonlinear increase ΔΩ in the angular frequency of all bounding surfaces. The fluid is contained in a cylinder of square cross-section which is aligned centrally along the rotation axis, and we focus on the O(Ro−1Ω−1) time scale, where Ro=ΔΩ/Ω is the Rossby number. The flow development is shown to be dominated by unsteady separation of a viscous sidewall layer, leading to an eruption of vorticity that becomes trapped in the four vertical corners of the container. The longer-time evolution on the standard ‘spin-up’ time scale, E−1/2Ω−1 (where E is the associated Ekman number), has been described in detail for this geometry by Foster & Munro (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 712, 2012, pp. 7–40), but only for small changes in the container’s rotation rate (i.e. Ro≪1). In the linear case, for Ro≪E1/2≪1, there is no sidewall separation. In the present investigation we focus on the fully nonlinear problem, Ro=O(1), for which the sidewall viscous layers are Prandtl boundary layers and (somewhat unusually) periodic around the container’s circumference. Some care is required in the corners of the container, but we show that the sidewall boundary layer breaks down (separates) shortly after an impulsive change in rotation rate. These theoretical boundary-layer results are compared with two-dimensional Navier–Stokes results which capture the eruption of vorticity, and these are in turn compared to laboratory observations and data. The experiments show that when the Burger number, S=(N/Ω)2 (where N is the buoyancy frequency), is relatively large – corresponding to a strongly stratified fluid – the flow remains (horizontally) two-dimensional on the O(Ro−1Ω−1) time scale, and good quantitative predictions can be made by a two-dimensional theory. As S was reduced in the experiments, three-dimensional effects were observed to become important in the core of each corner vortex, on this time scale, but only after the breakdown of the sidewall layers. Cambridge University Press 2015-06-01 Article PeerReviewed Munro, Richard J., Hewitt, R.E and Foster, M.R. (2015) On the formation of axial corner vortices during spin-up in a cylinder of square cross-section. Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 772 . pp. 246-271. ISSN 1469-7645 boundary-layer separation; rotating flows; stratified flows http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/jfm.2015.219 doi:10.1017/jfm.2015.219 doi:10.1017/jfm.2015.219
spellingShingle boundary-layer separation; rotating flows; stratified flows
Munro, Richard J.
Hewitt, R.E
Foster, M.R.
On the formation of axial corner vortices during spin-up in a cylinder of square cross-section
title On the formation of axial corner vortices during spin-up in a cylinder of square cross-section
title_full On the formation of axial corner vortices during spin-up in a cylinder of square cross-section
title_fullStr On the formation of axial corner vortices during spin-up in a cylinder of square cross-section
title_full_unstemmed On the formation of axial corner vortices during spin-up in a cylinder of square cross-section
title_short On the formation of axial corner vortices during spin-up in a cylinder of square cross-section
title_sort on the formation of axial corner vortices during spin-up in a cylinder of square cross-section
topic boundary-layer separation; rotating flows; stratified flows
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33544/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33544/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33544/