Suppressing Taylor vortices in a Taylor--Couette flow system with free surface
ORAL
Abstract
Taylor--Couette flows have been extensively investigated due to their many industrial applications, such as catalytic reactors, electrochemistry, photochemistry, biochemistry, and polymerization. Mass transfer applications include extraction, tangential filtration, crystallization, and dialysis. A 3D study is carried out to simulate a Taylor--Couette flow with a rotating and pulsating inner cylinder. We utilize FLUENT to simulate the incompressible flow with a free surface. The study reveals that flow structuring is initiated with the development of an Ekman vortex at low Taylor number, Ta $=0.01$. For all encountered flow regimes, the Taylor vortices are systematically inhibited by the pulsatile motion of the inner cylinder. A spectral analysis shows that this pulsatile motion causes a rapid decay of the free surface oscillations, from a periodic wavy movement to a chaotic one, then to a fully turbulent motion. This degenerative free surface behavior is interpreted as the underlying mechanism responsible for the inhibition of the Taylor vortices.
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Authors
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A. Bouabdallah
Universit\'e des Sciences et de la Technologie Houari Boumediene, Algiers, Algeria
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H. Oualli
\'Ecole Militaire Polytechnique, Algiers, Algeria
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M. Mekadem
\'Ecole Militaire Polytechnique, Algiers, Algeria
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M. Gad-el-Hak
Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia, USA, Virginia Commonwealth University