The influence of Coriolis force on surface-tension-driven convection
- 1 September 1966
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Journal of Fluid Mechanics
- Vol. 26 (4) , 807-818
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s002211206600154x
Abstract
The effect of uniform rotation on surface-tension-driven convection in an evaporating fluid layer is considered both theoretically and experimentally. The theoretical analysis follows the usual small-disturbance approach of perturbation theory and leads, at the neutral state, to a functional relation between the Marangoni and Taylor numbers which is then computed numerically. In addition, it is shown analytically that, in the limit of rapid rotation, the velocity and temperature fluctuations are confined to a thin Ekman layer near the surface, and that Mc = 4·42T½ and ac = 0·5T¼, where Mc and ac are, respectively, the critical Marangoni number and the critical wave number for neutral stability, and T is the Taylor number.The experimental part deals primarily with the flow pattern of a 50% solution of ethyl ether in n-heptane evaporating into still air. In this case, the convective flow is surface-tension-driven and its structure was observed using schlieren optics. In the absence of rotation, the flow shows a remarkable cellular pattern when the layer is shallow, but when the depth of the layer is increased the pattern quickly becomes highly irregular. In contrast, for T > 103, a cellular structure is always observed even for deep layers, a result which is attributable to the stabilizing effect of the Coriolis force. A further increase in T leaves the flow pattern unchanged except that the size of the cells is found to decrease as T−¼ which is in agreement with the results of the linear stability analysis.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Nature of the Neutral State in Surface-Tension Driven ConvectionPhysics of Fluids, 1966
- The effect of surface active agents on convection cells induced by surface tensionChemical Engineering Science, 1965
- On the Thermal Instability of a Highly Rotating Fluid Sphere.The Astrophysical Journal, 1965