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An experimental investigation of turbulent stratified shearing flow

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 March 2006

Michael J. Moore
Affiliation:
Department of Mechanics, The Johns Hopkins University
Robert R. Long
Affiliation:
Department of Mechanics, The Johns Hopkins University

Abstract

Some experiments are described in which steady-state shearing flows are developed in stratified brine solutions contained in a cyclically continuous tank of rectangular cross-section. Over the range of overall Richardson numbers studied, the results suggest that whenever turbulent layers are present on either side of a region of fluid with a gravitationally stable density gradient, they cause erosion of this region to occur. The erosion leads to the formation of two homogeneous layers separated by a thin layer of strong density and velocity gradients. The gradient Richardson number, computed by using the velocity and density gradients in this transition layer, tends to have a value of order one.

If we define an overall Richardson number Ri* by averaging the velocity and density gradients over the entire depth of fluid in the tank, we find that the non- dimensional buoyancy flux, Q, is functionally related to Ri* by an equation of the form Q = C1(Ri*)−1 where C1 is a constant, approximately, and Ri* ranges in value between one and thirty.

To check the effect of a large variation of the molecular diffusivity coefficient on flow conditions, we ran a limited number of experiments with thermally stratified fluid. Over a restricted range, 1·0 < Ri* < 5·0, velocity profiles very similar to those measured in the brine-stratified experiments at like values of Ri* were obtained. This suggests that the coefficient of molecular diffusion is not an important parameter in either type of experiment.

Other experiments, made in the same apparatus, describe the entrainment by a turbulent, homogeneous layer of an initially quiescent layer of fluid with a linear density gradient. The depth of the turbulent layer, D, increases with time, t, according to the relation. \[ D^3\propto t. \] This result is consistent with that found by Kato & Phillips (1969), although the turbulent layer in the present experiment is generated in a different manner.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 1971 Cambridge University Press

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