Traveling wave instability in sustained double-diffusive convection
Predtechensky, A. A. ; McCormick, W. D. ; Swift, J. B. ; Rossberg, A. G. ; Swinney, Harry L.
[S.l.] : American Institute of Physics (AIP)
Published 1994
[S.l.] : American Institute of Physics (AIP)
Published 1994
ISSN: |
1089-7666
|
---|---|
Source: |
AIP Digital Archive
|
Topics: |
Physics
|
Notes: |
Experiments on buoyancy-driven double-diffusive convection sustained by imposed vertical concentration gradients (one stabilizing, the other destabilizing) have been conducted in a thin (Hele–Shaw) isothermal rectangular cell. Novel gel-filled membranes were used to sustain the concentrations at the boundaries. When the destabilizing solute diffuses more rapidly than the stabilizing one, the primary instability leads to traveling waves with a high reflection coefficient at the ends of the cell. The measured critical Rayleigh numbers and frequencies are in reasonable accord with a stability analysis that includes corrections for the finite thickness of the cell and cross-diffusion effects. The weakly nonlinear waves that appear at onset do not stabilize, even very close to the transition, but continue to evolve, eventually becoming a packet of large amplitude plumes. The packet travels back and forth along the cell in a nearly periodic manner. This behavior and the absence of measurable hysteresis are consistent with the present weakly nonlinear analysis which predicts tricritical scaling (∼ε1/4 rather than the usual ε1/2) all along the instability boundary. However, the range of this scaling in ε was found to be less than 0.005, which is inaccessible in the present experiments. © 1994 American Institute of Physics.
|
Type of Medium: |
Electronic Resource
|
URL: |