Stability of Lid-Driven Shallow Cavity Heated from Below
Material type: ArticleDescription: 2155-2166 pISSN:- 0017-9310
Item type | Current library | Call number | Vol info | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Articles | Periodical Section | Vol.32, No.11 (November, 1989) | Available |
Hydrodynamic and thermal stability of combined thermal buoyancy and lid-driven shear flow in a shallow cavity is analyzed by means of linearized perturbation theory. The analysis considers a cavity heated from below and cooled at the upper moving lid. A numerical procedure, which has generality with respect to boundary conditions, Reynolds, and Prandtl numbers, is described for solution of the linearized model equations. A direct numerical integration (Runge-Kutta with Newton-Raphson) method is used to solve the differential conservation equations. This method gives an exact result for the classical Benard problem where the flow becomes unstable at a critical Rayleigh number, Rac = 1707.76. The numerical results show the existence of two critical wave numbers depending on whether the dominant force driving the flow is due to buoyancy or shear. For Pr ⩽ 0.1 the instability is due to the buoyancy force for constant heat flux boundary conditions, while for Pr = 1 the instability is due to the shear force. Increasing the Reynolds number stabilizes the flow, and reducing the Prandtl number makes the flow more unstable.