1. Vortex plume distribution in confined turbulent rotating convection
- Author
-
Yoann Corre, Herman Clercx, Rudie Kunnen, Fluids and Flows, Turbulent and Multiphase Flows (Kunnen), and Transport in Turbulent Flows (Clercx)
- Subjects
Physics ,IR-88723 ,Turbulence ,EWI-24133 ,Prandtl number ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Mechanics ,Rayleigh number ,Rotation ,METIS-302577 ,Vortex ,Physics::Fluid Dynamics ,symbols.namesake ,Boundary layer ,Classical mechanics ,Particle image velocimetry ,Transition point ,symbols ,Rotating and swirling flows ,Thermal Convection - Abstract
Vortical columns are key features of rapidly rotating turbulent Rayleigh-Benard convection. In this work we probe the structure of the sidewall boundary layers experimentally and show how they affect the spatial vortex distribution in a cylindrical cell. The cell has a diameter-to-height aspect ratio 1/2 and is operated at Rayleigh number $5.9 \times 10^9$ and Prandtl number 6.4. The vortices are detected using particle image velocimetry. We find that for inverse Rossby numbers 1/Ro > 3 (expressing the rotation rate in a dimensionless form) the sidewall boundary layer exhibits a rotation-dependent thickness and a characteristic radial profile in the root-mean-square azimuthal velocity with two peaks rather than a single peak typical for the non-rotating case. These properties point to Stewartson-type boundary layers, which can actually cover most of the domain for rotation rates just above the transition point. A zonal ordering of vortices into two azimuthal bands at moderate rotation rates 3 < 1/Ro < 7 can be attributed to the sidewall boundary layer. Additionally, we present experimental confirmation of the tendency of like-signed vortices to cluster on opposite sides of the cylinder for 1 < 1/Ro < 5. At higher rotation rates and away from the sidewall the vortices are nearly uniformly distributed.
- Published
- 2013