首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 62 毫秒
1.
The presence of a finite tangential velocity on a hydrodynamically slipping surface is known to reduce vorticity production in bluff body flows substantially while at the same time enhancing its convection downstream and into the wake. Here, we investigate the effect of hydrodynamic slippage on the convective heat transfer (scalar transport) from a heated isothermal circular cylinder placed in a uniform cross-flow of an incompressible fluid through analytical and simulation techniques. At low Reynolds (\({\textit{Re}}\ll 1\)) and high Péclet (\({\textit{Pe}}\gg 1\)) numbers, our theoretical analysis based on Oseen and thermal boundary layer equations allows for an explicit determination of the dependence of the thermal transport on the non-dimensional slip length \(l_s\). In this case, the surface-averaged Nusselt number, Nu transitions gradually between the asymptotic limits of \(Nu \sim {\textit{Pe}}^{1/3}\) and \(Nu \sim {\textit{Pe}}^{1/2}\) for no-slip (\(l_s \rightarrow 0\)) and shear-free (\(l_s \rightarrow \infty \)) boundaries, respectively. Boundary layer analysis also shows that the scaling \(Nu \sim {\textit{Pe}}^{1/2}\) holds for a shear-free cylinder surface in the asymptotic limit of \({\textit{Re}}\gg 1\) so that the corresponding heat transfer rate becomes independent of the fluid viscosity. At finite \({\textit{Re}}\), results from our two-dimensional simulations confirm the scaling \(Nu \sim {\textit{Pe}}^{1/2}\) for a shear-free boundary over the range \(0.1 \le {\textit{Re}}\le 10^3\) and \(0.1\le {\textit{Pr}}\le 10\). A gradual transition from the lower asymptotic limit corresponding to a no-slip surface, to the upper limit for a shear-free boundary, with \(l_s\), is observed in both the maximum slip velocity and the Nu. The local time-averaged Nusselt number \(Nu_{\theta }\) for a shear-free surface exceeds the one for a no-slip surface all along the cylinder boundary except over the downstream portion where unsteady separation and flow reversal lead to an appreciable rise in the local heat transfer rates, especially at high \({\textit{Re}}\) and Pr. At a Reynolds number of \(10^3\), the formation of secondary recirculating eddy pairs results in appearance of additional local maxima in \(Nu_{\theta }\) at locations that are in close proximity to the mean secondary stagnation points. As a consequence, Nu exhibits a non-monotonic variation with \(l_s\) increasing initially from its lowermost value for a no-slip surface and then decreasing before rising gradually toward the upper asymptotic limit for a shear-free cylinder. A non-monotonic dependence of the spanwise-averaged Nu on \(l_s\) is observed in three dimensions as well with the three-dimensional wake instabilities that appear at sufficiently low \(l_s\), strongly influencing the convective thermal transport from the cylinder. The analogy between heat transfer and single-component mass transfer implies that our results can directly be applied to determine the dependency of convective mass transfer of a single solute on hydrodynamic slip length in similar configurations through straightforward replacement of Nu and \({\textit{Pr}}\) with Sherwood and Schmidt numbers, respectively.  相似文献   

2.
This paper presents a two-dimensional numerical study for mixed convection in a laminar cross-flow with a pair of stationary equal-sized isothermal cylinders in tandem arrangement confined in a channel. The governing equations are solved using the control volume method on a nonuniform orthogonal Cartesian grid, and the immersed boundary method is employed to identify the cylinders placed in the flow field. The numerical scheme is first validated against standard cases of symmetrically confined isothermal circular cylinders in plane channels, and grid convergence tests were also examined. The objective of the present study was to investigate the influence of buoyancy and the blockage ratio constraint on the flow and heat transfer characteristics of the immersed cylinder array. Using a fixed Reynolds number based on cylinder diameter of \(Re_{D} = 200\), a fixed value of the Prandtl number of \(Pr = 7\), and a blockage ratio of \(D/H = 0.2\), all possible flow regimes are considered by setting the longitudinal spacing ratio (\(\sigma = L/D\)) between the cylinder axes to 2, 3, and 5 for values of the buoyancy parameter (Richardson number) in the range \(-1\le Ri\le 4\). The interference effects and complex flow features are presented in the form of mean and instantaneous velocity, vorticity, and temperature distributions. The results demonstrate how the buoyancy, spacing ratio, and wall confinement affect the wake structure and vortex dynamics. In addition, local and average heat transfer characteristics of both cylinders are comprehensively presented for a wide range in the parametric space.  相似文献   

3.
The appearance of a ground surface can play an important role in the flow structures for the flows past a flat plate. We conduct two-dimensional numerical simulations on viscous flows past a flat plate inclined at an angle of attack of \(20^\circ \) with ground effects using a finite-volume method. Results show that the effects on the separated flow from the ground are highly dependent on the gap (G) between the plate and the ground. As the gap decreases, the strength of vortices generated from the trailing edge is restrained, which is consistent with experimental observations. Further decrease in the gap even eliminates the vortex shedding and yields a steady flow. It is also found that the flow between the gap can either be accelerated at large gap ratios (\({G/L >1}\), G is the gap, L is the plate length), or be decelerated at small gap ratios (\({G/L <1}\)). Furthermore, the numerical results show that the wake flow behind the plate can significantly change the distribution of surface shear stress on the ground. Specifically, the mean shear stress on the ground in the downstream region at a gap ratio \(G/L = 2.0\) is one order of magnitude larger than that at a small gap ratio \(G/L = 0.3\), and the length of the downstream region where the shear stress can be effectively changed is much larger than the plate length, which provides a guideline to manipulate the ground wall surface shear stress using an inclined plate in the vicinity of the wall.  相似文献   

4.
5.
6.
A large number (1253) of high-quality streaming potential coefficient (\(C_\mathrm{sp})\) measurements have been carried out on Berea, Boise, Fontainebleau, and Lochaline sandstones (the latter two including both detrital and authigenic overgrowth forms), as a function of pore fluid salinity (\(C_\mathrm{f})\) and rock microstructure. All samples were saturated with fully equilibrated aqueous solutions of NaCl (10\(^{-5}\) and 4.5 mol/dm\(^{3})\) upon which accurate measurements of their electrical conductivity and pH were taken. These \(C_\mathrm{sp}\) measurements represent about a fivefold increase in streaming potential data available in the literature, are consistent with the pre-existing 266 measurements, and have lower experimental uncertainties. The \(C_\mathrm{sp}\) measurements follow a pH-sensitive power law behaviour with respect to \(C_\mathrm{f}\) at medium salinities (\(C_\mathrm{sp} =-\,1.44\times 10^{-9} C_\mathrm{f}^{-\,1.127} \), units: V/Pa and mol/dm\(^{3})\) and show the effect of rock microstructure on the low salinity \(C_\mathrm{sp}\) clearly, producing a smaller decrease in \(C_\mathrm{sp}\) per decade reduction in \(C_\mathrm{f}\) for samples with (i) lower porosity, (ii) larger cementation exponents, (iii) smaller grain sizes (and hence pore and pore throat sizes), and (iv) larger surface conduction. The \(C_\mathrm{sp}\) measurements include 313 made at \(C_\mathrm{f} > 1\) mol/dm\(^{3}\), which confirm the limiting high salinity \(C_\mathrm{sp}\) behaviour noted by Vinogradov et al., which has been ascribed to the attainment of maximum charge density in the electrical double layer occurring when the Debye length approximates to the size of the hydrated metal ion. The zeta potential (\(\zeta \)) was calculated from each \(C_\mathrm{sp}\) measurement. It was found that \(\zeta \) is highly sensitive to pH but not sensitive to rock microstructure. It exhibits a pH-dependent logarithmic behaviour with respect to \(C_\mathrm{f}\) at low to medium salinities (\(\zeta =0.01133 \log _{10} \left( {C_\mathrm{f} } \right) +0.003505\), units: V and mol/dm\(^{3})\) and a limiting zeta potential (zeta potential offset) at high salinities of \({\zeta }_\mathrm{o} = -\,17.36\pm 5.11\) mV in the pH range 6–8, which is also pH dependent. The sensitivity of both \(C_\mathrm{sp}\) and \(\zeta \) to pH and of \(C_\mathrm{sp}\) to rock microstructure indicates that \(C_\mathrm{sp}\) and \(\zeta \) measurements can only be interpreted together with accurate and equilibrated measurements of pore fluid conductivity and pH and supporting microstructural and surface conduction measurements for each sample.  相似文献   

7.
Flow development and degradation during Type B turbulent drag reduction by 0.10 to 10 wppm solutions of a partially-hydrolysed polyacrylamide B1120 of MW \(=\) 18x106 was studied in a smooth pipe of ID \(=\) 4.60 mm and L/D \(=\) 210 at Reynolds numbers from 10000 to 80000 and wall shear stresses Tw from 8 to 600 Pa. B1120 solutions exhibited facets of a Type B ladder, including segments roughly parallel to, but displaced upward from, the P-K line; those that attained asymptotic maximum drag reduction at low Re f but departed downwards into the polymeric regime at a higher retro-onset Re f; and segments at MDR for all Re f. Axial flow enhancement profiles of S\(^{\prime }\) vs L/D reflected a superposition of flow development and polymer degradation effects, the former increasing and the latter diminishing S\(^{\prime }\) with increasing distance downstream. Solutions that induced normalized flow enhancements S\(^{\prime }\)/S\(^{\prime }_{\mathrm {m}} <\) 0.4 developed akin to solvent, with Le,p/D \(=\) Le,n/D \(<\) 42.3, while those at maximum drag reduction showed entrance lengths Le,m/D \(\sim \) 117, roughly 3 times the solvent Le,n/D. Degradation kinetics were inferred by first detecting a falloff point (Ref, S\(^{{\prime }\wedge }\)), of maximum observed flow enhancement, for each polymer solution. A plot of S\(^{{\prime }\wedge }\)vs C revealed S\(^{{\prime }\wedge }\)linear in C at low C, with lower bound [S\(^{\prime }\)] \(=\) 5.0 wppm??1, and S\(^{{\prime }\wedge }\) independent of C at high C, with upper bound S\(^{\prime }_{\mathrm {m}} =\) 15.9. The ratio S\(^{\prime }\)/S\(^{{\prime }\wedge }\) in any pipe section was interpreted to be the undegraded fraction of original polymer therein. Semi-log plots of (S\(^{\prime }\)/S\(^{{\prime }\wedge }\)) at a section vs transit time from pipe entrance thereto revealed first order kinetics, from which apparent degradation rate constants kdeg s??1 and entrance severities ?ln(S\(^{\prime }\)/S\(^{{\prime }\wedge }\))0 were extracted. At constant C, kdeg increased linearly with increasing wall shear stress Tw, and at constant Tw, kdeg was independent of C, providing a B1120 degradation modulus (kdeg/Tw) \(=\) (0.012 \(\pm \) 0.001) (Pa s)??1 for 8 \(<\) Tw Pa \(<\) 600, 0.30 \(<\) C wppm \(<\) 10. Entrance severities were negligible below a threshold Twe \(\sim \) 30 Pa and increased linearly with increasing Tw for Tw \(>\) Twe. The foregoing methods were applied to Type A drag reduction by 0.10 to 10 wppm solutions of a polyethyleneoxide PEO P309, MW \(=\) 11x106, in a smooth pipe of ID \(=\) 7.77 mm and L/D \(=\) 220 at Re from 4000 to 115000. P309 solutions that induced S\(^{\prime }\)/S\(^{\prime }_{\mathrm {m}} <\) 0.4 developed akin to solvent, with Le,p/D \(=\) Le,n/D \(<\) 23, while those at MDR had entrance lengths Le,m/D \(\sim \) 93, roughly 4 times the solvent Le,n/D. P309 solutions described a Type A fan distorted by polymer degradation. A typical trajectory departed the P-K line at an onset point Re f* followed by ascending and descending polymeric regime segments separated by a falloff point Ref, of maximum flow enhancement; for all P309 solutions, onset Re f* = 550 \(\pm \) 100 and falloff Ref = 2550 \(\pm \) 250, the interval between them delineating Type A drag reduction unaffected by degradation. A plot of falloff S\(^{{\prime }\wedge }\) vs C for PEO P309 solutions bore a striking resemblance to the analogous S\(^{{\prime }\wedge }\) vs C plot for solutions of PAMH B1120, indicating that the initial Type A drag reduction by P309 after onset at Re f* had evolved to Type B drag reduction by falloff at Ref. Presuming that Type B behaviour persisted past falloff permitted inference of P309 degradation kinetics; kdeg was found to increase linearly with increasing Tw at constant C and was independent of C at constant Tw, providing a P309 degradation modulus (kdeg/Tw) \(=\) (0.011 \(\pm \) 0.002) (Pa s)??1 for 4 \(<\) Tw Pa \(<\) 400, 0.10 \(<\) C wppm < 5.0. Comparisons between the present degradation kinetics and previous literature showed (kdeg/Tw) data from laboratory pipes of D \(\sim \) 0.01 m to lie on a simple extension of (kdeg/Tw) data from pipelines of D \(\sim \) 0.1 m and 1.0 m, along a power-law relation (kdeg/Tw) \(=\) 10??5.4.D??1.6. Intrinsic slips derived from PAMH B1120 and PEO P309-at-falloff experiments were compared with previous examples from Type B drag reduction by polymers with vinylic and glycosidic backbones, showing: (i) For a given polymer, [S\(^{\prime }\)] was independent of Re f and pipe ID, implying insensitivity to both micro- and macro-scales of turbulence; and (ii) [S\(^{\prime }\)] increased linearly with increasing polymer chain contour length Lc, the proportionality constant \(\beta =\) 0.053 \(\pm \) 0.036 enabling estimation of flow enhancement S\(^{\prime } =\) C.Lc.β for all Type B drag reduction by polymers.  相似文献   

8.
In the paper [Large-amplitude periodic solutions for differential equations with delayed monotone positive feedback, JDDE 23 (2011), no. 4, 727–790], we have constructed large-amplitude periodic orbits for an equation with delayed monotone positive feedback. We have shown that the unstable sets of the large-amplitude periodic orbits constitute the global attractor besides spindle-like structures. In this paper we focus on a large-amplitude periodic orbit \({\mathcal {O}}_{p}\) with two Floquet multipliers outside the unit circle, and we intend to characterize the geometric structure of its unstable set \({\mathcal {W}}^{u}\left( {\mathcal {O}}_{p}\right) \). We prove that \({\mathcal {W}}^{u}\left( {\mathcal {O}}_{p}\right) \) is a three-dimensional \(C^{1}\)-submanifold of the phase space and admits a smooth global graph representation. Within \({\mathcal {W}}^{u}\left( {\mathcal {O}}_{p}\right) \), there exist heteroclinic connections from \({\mathcal {O}}_{p}\) to three different periodic orbits. These connecting sets are two-dimensional \(C^{1}\)-submanifolds of \({\mathcal {W}}^{u}\left( {\mathcal {O}}_{p}\right) \) and homeomorphic to the two-dimensional open annulus. They form \(C^{1}\)-smooth separatrices in the sense that they divide the points of \({\mathcal {W}}^{u}\left( {\mathcal {O}}_{p}\right) \) into three subsets according to their \(\omega \)-limit sets.  相似文献   

9.
This numerical study describes the eddy emergence and transformations in a slow steady axisymmetric air–water flow, driven by a rotating top disk in a vertical conical container. As water height \(H_{\mathrm{w}}\) and cone half-angle \(\beta \) vary, numerous flow metamorphoses occur. They are investigated for \(\beta =30^{\circ }, 45^{\circ }\), and \(60^{\circ }\). For small \(H_{\mathrm{w}}\), the air flow is multi-cellular with clockwise meridional circulation near the disk. The air flow becomes one cellular as \(H_{\mathrm{w}}\) exceeds a threshold depending on \(\beta \). For all \(\beta \), the water flow has an unbounded number of eddies whose size and strength diminish as the cone apex is approached. As the water level becomes close to the disk, the outmost water eddy with clockwise meridional circulation expands, reaches the interface, and induces a thin layer with anticlockwise circulation in the air. Then this layer expands and occupies the entire air domain. The physical reasons for the flow transformations are provided. The results are of fundamental interest and can be relevant for aerial bioreactors.  相似文献   

10.
Many all-speed Roe schemes have been proposed to improve performance in terms of low speeds. Among them,the F-Roe and T-D-Roe schemes have been found to get incorrect density fluctuation in low Mach flows, which is expected to be with the square of Mach number. Asymptotic analysis presents the mechanism of how the density fluctuation problem relates to the incorrect order of terms in the energy equation UΔU. It is known that changing the upwind scheme coefficients of the pressure-difference dissipation term DPand the velocity-difference dissipation term in the momentum equation D~(ρU)to the order of O(c~(-1))and O(c~0) can improve the level of pressure and velocity accuracy at low speeds. This paper shows that corresponding changes in energy equation can also improve the density accuracy in low speeds. We apply this modification to a recently proposed scheme, TV-MAS, to get a new scheme,TV-MAS2. Unsteady Gresho vortex flow, double shear-layer flow, low Mach number flows over the inviscid cylinder, and NACA0012 airfoil show that energy equation modification in these schemes can obtain the expected square Ma scaling of density fluctuations, which is in good agreement with corresponding asymptotic analysis. Therefore, this density correction is expected to be widely implemented into allspeed compressible flow solvers.  相似文献   

11.
Consider a weakly nonlinear CGL equation on the torus \(\mathbb {T}^d\):
$$\begin{aligned} u_t+i\Delta u=\epsilon [\mu (-1)^{m-1}\Delta ^{m} u+b|u|^{2p}u+ ic|u|^{2q}u]. \end{aligned}$$
(*)
Here \(u=u(t,x)\), \(x\in \mathbb {T}^d\), \(0<\epsilon <<1\), \(\mu \geqslant 0\), \(b,c\in \mathbb {R}\) and \(m,p,q\in \mathbb {N}\). Define \(I(u)=(I_{\mathbf {k}},\mathbf {k}\in \mathbb {Z}^d)\), where \(I_{\mathbf {k}}=v_{\mathbf {k}}\bar{v}_{\mathbf {k}}/2\) and \(v_{\mathbf {k}}\), \(\mathbf {k}\in \mathbb {Z}^d\), are the Fourier coefficients of the function \(u\) we give. Assume that the equation \((*)\) is well posed on time intervals of order \(\epsilon ^{-1}\) and its solutions have there a-priori bounds, independent of the small parameter. Let \(u(t,x)\) solve the equation \((*)\). If \(\epsilon \) is small enough, then for \(t\lesssim {\epsilon ^{-1}}\), the quantity \(I(u(t,x))\) can be well described by solutions of an effective equation:
$$\begin{aligned} u_t=\epsilon [\mu (-1)^{m-1}\Delta ^m u+ F(u)], \end{aligned}$$
where the term \(F(u)\) can be constructed through a kind of resonant averaging of the nonlinearity \(b|u|^{2p}+ ic|u|^{2q}u\).
  相似文献   

12.
In this paper we prove asymptotically sharp weighted “first-and-a-half” \(2D\) Korn and Korn-like inequalities with a singular weight occurring from Cartesian to cylindrical change of variables. We prove some Hardy and the so-called “harmonic function gradient separation” inequalities with the same singular weight. Then we apply the obtained \(2D\) inequalities to prove similar inequalities for washers with thickness \(h\) subject to vanishing Dirichlet boundary conditions on the inner and outer thin faces of the washer. A washer can be regarded in two ways: As the limit case of a conical shell when the slope goes to zero, or as a very short hollow cylinder. While the optimal Korn constant in the first Korn inequality for a conical shell with thickness \(h\) and with a positive slope scales like \(h^{1.5}\), e.g., (Grabovsky and Harutyunyan in arXiv:1602.03601, 2016), the optimal Korn constant in the first Korn inequality for a washer scales like \(h^{2}\) and depends only on the outer radius of the washer as we show in the present work. The Korn constant in the first and a half inequality scales like \(h\) and depends only on \(h\). The optimal Korn constant is realized by a Kirchhoff Ansatz. This results can be applied to calculate the critical buckling load of a washer under in plane loads, e.g., (Antman and Stepanov in J. Elast. 124(2):243–278, 2016).  相似文献   

13.
We consider a family of linearly elastic shells with thickness \(2\varepsilon\) (where \(\varepsilon\) is a small parameter). The shells are clamped along a portion of their lateral face, all having the same middle surface \(S\), and may enter in contact with a rigid foundation along the bottom face.We are interested in studying the limit behavior of both the three-dimensional problems, given in curvilinear coordinates, and their solutions (displacements \(\boldsymbol{u}^{\varepsilon}\) of covariant components \(u_{i}^{\varepsilon}\)) when \(\varepsilon\) tends to zero. To do that, we use asymptotic analysis methods. On one hand, we find that if the applied body force density is \(O(1)\) with respect to \(\varepsilon\) and surface tractions density is \(O(\varepsilon)\), a suitable approximation of the variational formulation of the contact problem is a two-dimensional variational inequality which can be identified as the variational formulation of the obstacle problem for an elastic membrane. On the other hand, if the applied body force density is \(O(\varepsilon^{2})\) and surface tractions density is \(O(\varepsilon^{3})\), the corresponding approximation is a different two-dimensional inequality which can be identified as the variational formulation of the obstacle problem for an elastic flexural shell. We finally discuss the existence and uniqueness of solution for the limit two-dimensional variational problems found.  相似文献   

14.
We consider a family of linearly viscoelastic shells with thickness \(2\varepsilon\), clamped along their entire lateral face, all having the same middle surface \(S=\boldsymbol{\theta}(\bar{\omega})\subset \mathbb{R}^{3}\), where \(\omega\subset\mathbb{R}^{2}\) is a bounded and connected open set with a Lipschitz-continuous boundary \(\gamma\). We make an essential geometrical assumption on the middle surface \(S\), which is satisfied if \(\gamma\) and \(\boldsymbol{\theta}\) are smooth enough and \(S\) is uniformly elliptic. We show that, if the applied body force density is \(O(1)\) with respect to \(\varepsilon\) and surface tractions density is \(O(\varepsilon)\), the solution of the scaled variational problem in curvilinear coordinates, \(\boldsymbol{u}( \varepsilon)\), defined over the fixed domain \(\varOmega=\omega\times (-1,1)\) for each \(t\in[0,T]\), converges to a limit \(\boldsymbol{u}\) with \(u_{\alpha}(\varepsilon)\rightarrow u_{\alpha}\) in \(W^{1,2}(0,T,H ^{1}(\varOmega))\) and \(u_{3}(\varepsilon)\rightarrow u_{3}\) in \(W^{1,2}(0,T,L^{2}(\varOmega))\) as \(\varepsilon\to0\). Moreover, we prove that this limit is independent of the transverse variable. Furthermore, the average \(\bar{\boldsymbol{u}}= \frac{1}{2}\int_{-1}^{1} \boldsymbol{u}dx_{3}\), which belongs to the space \(W^{1,2}(0,T, V_{M}( \omega))\), where
$$V_{M}(\omega)=H^{1}_{0}(\omega)\times H^{1}_{0}(\omega)\times L ^{2}(\omega), $$
satisfies what we have identified as (scaled) two-dimensional equations of a viscoelastic membrane elliptic shell, which includes a long-term memory that takes into account previous deformations. We finally provide convergence results which justify those equations.
  相似文献   

15.
The flow over a porous laminated flat plate is investigated from a flow control perspective through experiments and computations. A square array of circular cylinders is used to model the porous lamination. We determine the velocities at the fluid–porous interface by solving the two-dimensional Navier–Stokes and the continuity equations using a staggered flow solver and using LDV in experiments. The control parameters for the porous region are porosity, \(\phi \) and Reynolds number, Re, based on the diameter of the circular cylinders used to model the porous lamination. Computations are conducted for \(0.4< \phi < 0.9\) and \(25< Re < 1000\), and the experiments are conducted for \(\phi = 0.65\) and 0.8 at \(Re \approx 391,\ 497\) and 803. The permeability of the porous lamination is observed to induce a slip velocity at the interface, effectively making it a slip wall. The slip velocity is seen to be increasing functions of \(\phi \) and Re. For higher porosities at higher Re, the slip velocity shows non-uniform and unsteady behavior and a breakdown Reynolds number is defined based on this characteristic. A map demarcating the two regimes of flow is drawn from the computational and experimental data. We observe that the boundary layer over the porous lamination is thinner than the Blasius boundary layer and the shear stress is higher at locations over the porous lamination. We note that the porous lamination helps maintain a favorable pressure gradient at the interface which delays separation. The suitable range of porosities for effective passive separation control is deduced from the results.  相似文献   

16.
We study the Liouville-type theorem for the semilinear parabolic equation \(u_t-\Delta u =|x|^a u^p\) with \(p>1\) and \(a\in {\mathbb R}\). Relying on the recent result of Quittner (Math Ann, doi: 10.1007/s00208-015-1219-7, 2015), we establish the optimal Liouville-type theorem in dimension \(N=2\), in the class of nonnegative bounded solutions. We also provide a partial result in dimension \(N\ge 3\). As applications of Liouville-type theorems, we derive the blow-up rate estimates for the corresponding Cauchy problem.  相似文献   

17.
Stereoscopic particle image velocimetry has been used to investigate inertia dominated, transitional and turbulent flow in a randomly packed bed of monosized PMMA spheres. By using an index-matched fluid, the bed is optically transparent and measurements can be performed in an arbitrary position within the porous bed. The velocity field observations are carried out for particle Reynolds numbers, \({Re}_{{p}}\), between 20 and 3220, and the sampling is done at a frequency of 75 Hz. Results show that, in porous media, the dynamics of the flow can vary significantly from pore to pore. At \({Re}_{{p}}\) around 400 the spatially averaged time fluctuations of total velocity reach a maximum and the spatial variation of the time-averaged total velocity, \(u_\mathrm{tot}\) increases up to about the same \({Re}_{{p}}\) and then it decreases. Also in the studied planes, a considerable amount of the fluid moves in the perpendicular directions to the main flow direction and the time-averaged magnitude of the velocity in the main direction, \(u_{x}\), has an averaged minimum of 40% of the magnitude of \(u_\mathrm{tot}\) at \({Re}_{{p}}\) about 400. For \({Re}_{{p}} > 1600\), this ratio is nearly constant and \(u_{x}\) is on average a little bit less than 50% of \(u_\mathrm{tot}\). The importance of the results for longitudinal and transverse dispersion is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Consider the planar Newtonian \((2N+1)\)-body problem, \(N\ge 1,\) with \(2N\) bodies of unit mass and one body of mass \(m\). Using the discrete symmetry due to the equal masses and reducing by the rotational symmetry, we show that solutions with the \(2N\) unit mass points at the vertices of two concentric regular \(N\)-gons and \(m\) at the centre at all times form invariant manifold. We study the regular \(2N\)-gon with central mass \(m\) relative equilibria within the dynamics on the invariant manifold described above. As \(m\) varies, we identify the bifurcations, relate our results to previous work and provide the spectral picture of the linearization at the relative equilibria.  相似文献   

19.
The two-dimensional, laminar, unsteady natural convection flow in a square enclosure filled with aluminum oxide (\(\hbox {Al}_{2} \hbox {O}_{3}\))–water nanofluid under the influence of a magnetic field, is considered numerically. The nanofluid is considered as Newtonian and incompressible, the nanoparticles and water are assumed to be in thermal equilibrium. The mathematical modelling results in a coupled nonlinear system of partial differential equations. The equations are solved using finite element method (FEM) in space, whereas, the implicit backward difference scheme is used in time direction. The results are obtained for Rayleigh (Ra), Hartmann (Ha) numbers, and nanoparticles volume fractions (\(\phi\)), in the ranges of \(10^3 \le Ra \le 10^7\), \(0\le Ha \le 500\) and \(0 \le \phi \le 0.2\), respectively. The streamlines and microrotation contours are observed to show similar behaviors with altering magnitudes. For low Ra values, when \(Ha=0\), symmetric vortices near the walls and a central vortex in opposite direction are observed in vorticity. As Ra increases, the central vortex splits into two due to the circulation in the effect of the buoyant flow. Boundary layer formation is observed when Ha increases for almost all Rayleigh numbers in both streamlines and vorticity. The isotherms have horizontal profiles for high Ra values owing to convective dominance over conduction. As Ha is increased, the convection effect is reduced, and isotherms tend to have vertical profiles. This study presents the first FEM application for solving highly nonlinear PDEs defining micropolar nanofluid flow especially for large values of Rayleigh and Hartmann numbers.  相似文献   

20.
Let (XG) be a G-action topological dynamical system (t.d.s. for short), where G is a countably infinite discrete amenable group. In this paper, we study the topological pressure of the sets of generic points. We show that when the system satisfies the almost specification property, for any G-invariant measure \(\mu \) and any continuous map \(\varphi \),
$$\begin{aligned} P\left( X_{\mu },\varphi ,\{F_n\}\right) = h_{\mu }(X)+\int \varphi d\mu , \end{aligned}$$
where \(\{F_n\}\) is a Følner sequence, \(X_{\mu }\) is the set of generic points of \(\mu \) with respect to (w.r.t. for short) \(\{F_n\}\), \(P(X_{\mu },\varphi ,\{F_n\})\) is the topological pressure of \(X_{\mu }\) for \(\varphi \) w.r.t. \(\{F_n\}\) and \(h_{\mu }(X)\) is the measure-theoretic entropy.
  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号