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Journal ArticleDOI

Turbulent buoyant convection from a source in a confined region

W. D. Baines, +1 more
- 05 Jun 1969 - 
- Vol. 37, Iss: 01, pp 51-80
TLDR
In this article, the effect of continuous convection from small sources of buoyancy on the properties of the environment when the region of interest is bounded is considered, assuming that the entrainment into the turbulent buoyant region is at a rate proportional to the local mean upward velocity, and that the buoyant elements spread out at the top of the region and become part of the non-turbulent environment at that level.
Abstract
This paper considers the effect of continuous convection from small sources of buoyancy on the properties of the environment when the region of interest is bounded. The main assumptions are that the entrainment into the turbulent buoyant region is at a rate proportional to the local mean upward velocity, and that the buoyant elements spread out at the top of the region and become part of the non-turbulent environment at that level. Asymptotic solutions, valid at large times, are obtained for the cases of plumes from point and line sources and also periodically released thermals. These all have the properties that the environment is stably stratified, with the density profile fixed in shape, changing at a uniform rate in time at all levels, and everywhere descending (with ascending buoyant elements).The analysis is carried out in detail for the point source in an environment of constant cross-section. Laboratory experiments have been conducted for this case, and these verify the major predictions of the theory. It is then shown how the method can be extended to include more realistic starting conditions for the convection, and a general shape of bounded environment. Finally, the model is applied quantitatively to a variety of problems in engineering, the atmosphere and the ocean, and the limitations on its use are discussed.

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Citations
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Abyssal recipes II: energetics of tidal and wind mixing

TL;DR: Using the Levitus climatology, the authors showed that 2.1 TW (terawatts) is required to maintain the global abyssal density distribution against 30 Sverdrups of deep water formation.
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Turbulent entrainment: the development of the entrainment assumption, and its application to geophysical flows

TL;DR: The entrainment assumption, relating the inflow velocity to the local mean velocity of a turbulent flow, has been used successfully to describe natural phenomena over a wide range of scales as mentioned in this paper.
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Double-diffusive convection

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a rather personal view of the important developments in double-diffusive convection, a subject whose evolution has been the result of a close interaction between theoreticians, laboratory experimenters and sea-going oceano-graphers.
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The fluid mechanics of natural ventilation

TL;DR: In this paper, two forms of ventilation are discussed: mixing ventilation and displacement ventilation, where the interior is at an approximately uniform temperature and there is strong internal stratification, respectively, and the effects of wind on them are examined.

The fluid mechanics of natural ventilation

TL;DR: In this paper, two forms of ventilation are discussed: mixing ventilation and displacement ventilation, where the interior is at an approximately uniform temperature and there is strong internal stratification, respectively, and the effects of wind on them are examined.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Turbulent gravitational convection from maintained and instantaneous sources

TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed a theory of convection from maintained and instantaneous sources of buoyancy, using methods which are applicable to stratified body fluids with any variation of density with height; detailed solutions have been presented for the case of a stably stratified fluid with a linear density gradient.
Journal ArticleDOI

Turbulent entrainment in stratified flows

TL;DR: In this article, it is assumed that the entrainment is proportional to the velocity of the layer multiplied by an empirical function, E(Ri), of the overall Richardson number for the layer defined by Ri = g(ρa - ρ) h/ρa V2.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gravitational Convection from a Boundary Source

TL;DR: In this paper, the mean patterns of free convection from a line source and a point source are presented without regard to the specific means by which the gravitational action is produced, and derived functional relationships are then verified and completed through use of velocity and temperature measurements above sources of heat, the generalized form of the results permitting characteristics of the mean flow to be determined over a considerable range of primary variables.
Journal ArticleDOI

Laminar free convection in a vertical slot

TL;DR: In this paper, the interaction of buoyancy and shear forces in the free convective flow of a liquid in a rectangular cavity across which there is a uniform temperature difference, ΔT, produced by maintaining the two vertical walls at two different temperatures.
Journal ArticleDOI

The boundary-layer regime for convection in a rectangular cavity

TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied the two-dimensional convective motion in a rectangular cavity, where the two vertical sides of which are maintained at different temperatures were studied for the special case in which the temperature difference ΔT between two vertical walls is so large that the transfer of heat from one vertical wall to the other is achieved almost entirely by convection.