dc.description.abstract |
Hydrodynamic instabilities created by a viscosity stratification-led shear are inevitable
in the context of effective drag-reduction techniques used in food or chemical industries,
aircraft wings, the famous polymer drag reduction, and lubricated pipe-lining for oil recovery
processes. A chemical reaction can change the viscosity by modifying the chemical composition
of underlying fluids; hence, generated instabilities are categorized into the bigger class called
Chemo-Hydrodynamic instabilities. Mathematical modeling and solving the corresponding
equations are essential to analyze these instabilities. From the industrial viewpoint, flow
instability control and its transition to different states are important, too. It can be achieved
by tuning the underlying dimensional groups representing various forces in the problem.
We deal with incompressible, Newtonian, and miscible fluids flowing through a 2D channel.
So the conservation of mass is expressed by the continuity equation, and the Navier-Stokes
equations well describe the momentum’s conservation. Moreover, miscible reactive fluids
satisfy a Convention-Diffusion-Reaction (CDR) equation for each solute concentration that
explains how two physical processes, such as convection and diffusion, interact with the
chemical reaction. Flow equations are coupled with these CDR equations to describe the
reactive fluid flow in a channel. We solve the system numerically in the non-linear regime
with the help of a finite volume method designed on a staggered grid. The scheme uses
the WENO (Weighted Essentially Non-Oscillatory) scheme to handle the solute transport in
highly convection-dominated regimes. The velocity is predicated for an intermediate time step
using Adams-Bashforth and Crank-Nicolson methods. Then a pressure correction is executed
following the continuity equation by the intermediate velocity to obtain the velocity at the new
time step.
A linear stability analysis (LSA) is performed in a layered flow configuration where one
iso-viscous reactant fluid is assumed to flow parallelly in the axial direction, overlying on the
other. At the contact zone, they produce a product of different viscosity in a fixed width
of the reaction zone throughout the channel length. Thus the base state concentrations of
two reactants and product fluid are assumed to follow a Reaction–Diffusion (RD) system till
a freezing time for which the product is formed in a zone of that fixed width and made
time-independent under Quasi-Streaty-State-Approximations. The RD system is numerically
solved using a finite difference method that uses Crank-Nicolson method for diffusion term
approximation and reaction terms are handled explicitly. The base state velocity is also
assumed to be steady, satisfying the fully developed Navier-Stokes equation, where the viscosity
is considered an exponential function of the product concentration. These basic states are
perturbed with normal modes type perturbations . This converts the stability problem into a
generalized Orr-Sommerfied equation under voriticity stream functions formulations for the
velocity perturbations, which is further coupled to linear perturbed equations from the RD
system. The Chebyshev spectral method is used to solve the final linear stability problem.
The growth/decay of perturbations is obtained by finding eigenvalues with positive
imaginary parts for a wide range of disturbance wave numbers. The flow goes most unstable for
shorter waves because of the overlap mode, for which the phase speed of perturbations matches with the base velocity within the mixed layer. An energy budget analysis reveals that most energy
is transferred to perturbations from the base viscosity profiles. If the reaction produces a less
viscous product than the reactants, the growth rate is higher than that of a more viscous product
except for very choppy/short waves. This is also shown through the critical log-mobility ratios
(Rcrit
c
) and Damköhler numbers (Da). Furthermore, it is found that if convection dominates more
than solute diffusion, then the flow is more unstable. With an increasing Reynolds number (Re),
the flow is found to be more unstable. However, flow can become more stable with increasing
Reynolds number for a lesser rate of reaction. The inflectional instability mode is also found at
this low reaction rate for a less viscous product case.
Roll-up-like of Kelvin-Helmholtz instability (KHI) pattern develops at the upper reaction
front in the linear regime if the product fluid is more viscous than reactants and flow is initiated
from a perturbed basic state with a sinusoidal disturbance having a wavenumber predicated to be
most unstable from LSA. However, the lower reaction front stably diffuses in a flat manner. One
reason is that the base state velocity profile avoids infection at the lower reaction front while it
possesses a favorable inflection point at the upper front. Secondly, roll-ups grow with time as the
multiple streamlines oscillate synchronously, behaving like they are in a phase-locked system.
A momentary analysis shows moments of reaction rate and product fluid shift oppositely in a
transverse direction as the instability grows with time. The standard deviation in the transversely
averaged product concentration profile from its mean increases in time at different rates, showing
an intermediate convection-dominated regime sandwiched between two diffusion-dominated
regimes. Severe interfacial deformations occur due to instability for greater Damköhler , Péclet
(P e), and Reynolds numbers, which validates the LSA results. Furthermore, the instability onsets
early for greater Damköhler and Reynolds numbers while delays for higher Péclet values.
The KHI pattern grows for less viscous product fluids, contrasting to that of the previously
observed more viscous product case. That is, roll-ups grow at the lower front, showing stabilizing
effect. This is due to inflection in the base velocity at the lower reaction front, while the double
derivative of the velocity gets away from zero at the upper reaction front. Since unstable roll-ups
grow at the lower front, the front eventually collides with the lower reflective channel boundary.
This makes streamlines out of phase, and the flow becomes more chaotic. The less viscous
product spreads vertically more than a more viscous product. The instability onsets early for
a less viscous reaction product compared to a more viscous product with equal log-mobility
ratio magnitude. The (Da − Rcrit
c
) phase plane obtained from computing the onset times shows
similar asymmetric behavior around Rcrit
c = 0 line as was observed from LSA.
In the displacement flow, when a miscible solution of one reactant (A) displaces another
iso-viscous reactant (B) and produces a more viscous product (C), KHI is found alongside an
elongated finger. A local increase in viscosity gradient due to the formation of the more viscous
product causes KHI only at one reaction front. While at the other front, the viscosity gradient
decreases in the flow direction; hence no KHI is noticed there. A laminar Horse-Shoe vortex is
also found to develop near the wall at the channel inlet, where the less viscous reactant pushes the
more viscous product. These instabilities may not occur even at high reaction rates (sufficiently
large Da), and viscosity contrast greater than a critical value is required to trigger them. The onset time and log-mobility ratio plots show unstable and stable time zones for each Da, P e,
and Re value. Further, the onset time can be linearly scaled with the Péclet number; as such,
the boundary curves between stable and unstable zones merge. This establishes proportionate
dynamics with respect to P e in the early stages of the instability. Moreover, a reverse dependency
of onset on lower Rc values for higher Reynolds numbers is observed.
Like the layered flow system, the flow-directed KH roll-ups occur either at the A−C interface
or the C−B interface in the displacement flow, depending on the product’s viscosity. However, as
no initial perturbations are given, there are KH roll-ups at different axial stations with different
amplitudes. Moreover, the number of KH roll-ups at the reactive interface is more when the
product is less viscous, and full vortex completion of KH roll-ups is noticed. The total amount
of product formation and reaction rate is more for a less viscous product, too. The product fluid
mixing and vorticity strength are also more if the product is less viscous than the reactants.
The instability onsets early for a less viscous product, with some exceptions near the critical
log-mobility ratio.
Keywords: Numerical method for partial differential equations, Linear stability analysis,
Finite volume method, Finite difference, Chebyshev spectral collocation method, shear
instability, channel flow, Chemo-Hydrodynamic instability, Kelvin-Helmholtz instability,
Horse-Shoe Instability, control measure, layered flow, displacement flow. |
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