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Journal ArticleDOI

Electro-convection in a dielectric liquid layer subjected to unipolar injection

TLDR
In this paper, the authors considered two asymptotic states of convection: one where the whole motion is dominated by viscosity, and one where inertial effects dominate, and they derived the dependence of the current density ratio I/I0 on the stability parameter T = M2R = eϕ0/Kρν, and on 1/R = ν/Kϕ 0, which is an equivalent Prandtl number.
Abstract
The problem of electric charge convection in a dielectric liquid layer of high ionic purity, when subjected to unipolar injection, is in many ways analogous to that of thermal convection in a horizontal fluid layer heated from below, although no formal analogy can be established. The problem treated is intrinsically more nonlinear than the thermal problem. We consider two asymptotic states of convection: one where the whole motion is dominated by viscosity, and one where inertial effects dominate. In each state, two or three spatial regions are distinguished. From the approximate equations that hold in the different regions, information about the variation of the different quantities with distance from the injector is obtained, and further approximations permit us to establish the dependence of the current density ratio I/I0 (called the electric Nusselt number) on the stability parameter T = M2R = eϕ0/Kρν, and on 1/R = ν/Kϕ0, which is an equivalent Prandtl number (e is the permittivity, ρ the fluid density, K the mobility, ν the kinematic viscosity, and ϕ0 the applied voltage). In the viscous state, the analysis gives I/I0 ∞ T½; in the inertial state the law I/I0 ∞ (T/R)1/4 = M½ is obtained. Since M is independent of the applied voltage, the latter law shows the saturation in the electric Nusselt number observed in earlier experiments. The transition in the states is associated with a transition number (MR)T [gap ] 30, which is an electric Reynolds number, related to an ordinary Reynolds number of about 10.The experimental results, obtained in liquids of very different viscosities and dielectric constants, verify these theoretical predictions; further, they yield more precise numerical coefficients. As for the transition criteria, the experiments confirm that the viscous and inertial effects are of the same order when Re [gap ] 10. It was also possible to determine roughly the limits of the viscous and inertial states. The viscous analysis remains valid up to a Reynolds number of about 1; the inertial state can be considered valid down to a Reynolds number of 60. Schlieren observations show that the motion has the structure of very stable hexagonal cells at applied voltages just above the critical voltage, which are transformed into unstable filaments when the voltage is increased further. At even higher voltages, the motion finally breaks down into turbulence. It may be of interest to point out that, when M < 3, the electric Nusselt number approaches 1, which is equivalent to the situation in thermal convection at low Prandtl numbers.

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Citations
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Convective instability: A physicist's approach

TL;DR: In this paper, a number of apparently disparate problems from engineering, meteorology, geophysics, fluid mechanics and applied mathematics are considered under the unifying heading of natural convection.
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Electrohydrodynamic instability and motion induced by injected space charge in insulating liquids

TL;DR: In this paper, a survey of different aspects of fluid motion induced by the Coulomb force exerted by the electric field on an injected space charge is given, and the instability problem in highly symmetrical electrode configurations is considered with positive coupling between velocity and charge perturbations, linear and nonlinear criteria and phenomena during the transient regime of unipolar injection.
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Coulomb-driven convection in electrohydrodynamics

TL;DR: The Coulomb-driven EHD instabilities, chaos, and turbulence generated by unipolar injection in insulating liquids are reviewed in this paper, with the emphasis on the physical mechanisms responsible for EHD phenomena.
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The Electrohydrodynamic Origin of Turbulence in Electrostatic Precipitators

TL;DR: In this article, the functioning of an electrostatic precipitator in the light of previous studies on various regimes of electroconvection in both parallel and divergent electric fields is examined.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Turbulent Thermal Convection at Arbitrary Prandtl Number

TL;DR: The mixing length theory of turbulent thermal convection in a gravitationally unstable fluid is extended to yield the dependence of Nusselt number H/H0 on both Prandtl number σ and Rayleigh number Ra.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Heat Transport and Spectrum of Thermal Turbulence

TL;DR: In this article, an upper limit to the heat transport is found subject to the constraint that some minimum eddy size exists which is effective in this transport, and the spectrum of convecting motions, the mean thermal gradients at each point and the eddy conductivity are then determined in terms of the minimum edddy size.
Journal ArticleDOI

Turbulent convection in a horizontal layer of water

TL;DR: In this paper, an interferometric method was used to measure the mean temperature distribution for Rayleigh numbers between 3·11 × 105 and 1·86 × 107, where the Nusselt number was found to be proportional to Ra 0·278 in the range 2·76 × 105 < Ra < 1·05 × 108.
Journal ArticleDOI

Two-dimensional Rayleigh-Benard convection

TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied two-dimensional convection in a Boussinesq fluid confined between free boundaries, with a Prandtl number p = 6·8 and showed that the heat flux is a maximum for square cells; steady convection is impossible for wider cells and finite amplitude oscillations appear instead, with periodic fluctuations of temperature and velocity in the layer.
Journal ArticleDOI

Investigation of turbulent thermal convection between horizontal plates

TL;DR: In this article, the properties of turbulent thermal convection were measured in air between horizontal plates maintained at constant temperatures, with a convection chamber designed to allow measurements to be taken along a horizontal path.
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