By tailoring the geometry of the upper boundary in turbulent Rayleigh-Benard convection we manipulate the boundary layer-interior flow interaction, and examine the heat transport using the lattice Boltzmann method. For fixed amplitude and varying boundary wavelength., we find that the exponent beta in the Nusselt-Rayleigh scaling relation, Nu - 1 proportional to Ra-beta, is maximized at lambda =lambda(max) approximate to ( 2 pi)(-1), but decays to the planar value in both the large (lambda >> lambda(max)) and small (lambda << lambda(max)) wavelength limits. The changes in the exponent originate in the nature of the coupling between the boundary layer and the interior flow. We present a simple scaling argument embodying this coupling, which describes the maximal convective heat flux. editor's choice Copyright (C) EPLA, 2015
Tailoring boundary geometry to optimize heat transport in turbulent convection
Succi Sauro;
2015
Abstract
By tailoring the geometry of the upper boundary in turbulent Rayleigh-Benard convection we manipulate the boundary layer-interior flow interaction, and examine the heat transport using the lattice Boltzmann method. For fixed amplitude and varying boundary wavelength., we find that the exponent beta in the Nusselt-Rayleigh scaling relation, Nu - 1 proportional to Ra-beta, is maximized at lambda =lambda(max) approximate to ( 2 pi)(-1), but decays to the planar value in both the large (lambda >> lambda(max)) and small (lambda << lambda(max)) wavelength limits. The changes in the exponent originate in the nature of the coupling between the boundary layer and the interior flow. We present a simple scaling argument embodying this coupling, which describes the maximal convective heat flux. editor's choice Copyright (C) EPLA, 2015I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.