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BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND FRACTAL STRUCTURE IN TURBULENT PLUMES

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Breakup of one of the protuberances through a turbulent plume (1.01 s) ... There is no protuberance in the CMC gel layer (t= 0.40 s) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND FRACTAL STRUCTURE IN TURBULENT PLUMES


1
BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND FRACTAL STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT PLUMES
INTERNATIONAL SUMMER COURSE ON NON-HOMOGENEOUS
TURBULENCE
2
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS
  • INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  • EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  • PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  • GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
3
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

INTRODUCTION. AIMS
  • Turbulent mixing is a very important issue in
    the study of geophysical phenomena because most
    fluxes arising in geophysics fluids are
    turbulent.
  • We study turbulent mixing due to convection
    using a laboratory experimental model with two
    miscible fluids of different density with an
    initial top heavy density distribution.
  • The conclusions of this experimental model
    relate the mixing efficiency and the volume of
    the final mixed layer to the Atwood number,
    ranging from 0.010 to 0.134.
  • Mixing produced in convective flows is
    investigated comparing different experiments
  • experiments with and without an intermediate gel
    layer
  • experiments with a line plume array and a
    bidimensional plume array.
  • We also study the fractal structure of non
    homogeneous plumes affected by different levels
    of buoyancy and initial potential energy.
  • We analyze the time evolution of the fractal
    dimension as plumes develop and we make a
    multifractal analysis.

BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
4
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

DIFFERENT KINDS OF EXPERIMENTS
DENSE LAYER DENSITY ??D ( , ) g/cm3 LIGHT
LAYER DENSITY ??L(1.03, 1.04) g/cm3 CMC GEL
LAYER DENSITY ??Gel 1.02 g/cm3 ??Gel 1.03
g/cm3
EXPERIMENTS WITH A CMC GEL LAYER
EXPERIMENTS WITHOUT A CMC GEL LAYER
1 PLUME EXPERIMENT
9 PLUME EXPERIMENT
EXPERIMENTS WITH A LINE PLUME ARRAY (1D)
EXPERIMENTS WITH A BIDIMENSIONAL PLUME ARRAY
(2D) 54 PLUMES
NUMBER EXPERIMENTS 200 ATWOOD NUMBER (0.01,
0.14)
NUMBER EXPERIMENTS 20 ATWOOD NUMBER 0.03 and
0.07
BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
5
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

EXPERIMENTAL SETUP FOR EXPERIMENTS WITH A CMC GEL
LAYER
BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
6
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

EXPERIMENTAL SETUP FOR EXPERIMENTS WITH A CMC GEL
LAYER
  • Turbulent mixing is generated experimentally
    under an unstable density distribution in a fluid
    system. The fluids that form the initial unstable
    stratification are miscible and the turbulence
    will produce molecular mixing.
  • Our experiment consists of three homogeneous
    fluids with different densities that are
    initially at rest.
  • The fluids are placed inside a cubic glass
    container. At the bottom of the container, it is
    the fluid with lower density ?L and with a height
    hL. On top of this light fluid layer, a
    sodiumcarboximethyl celulose gel stratum, or CMC
    gel, is placed with density ?G and depth of hG.
    The gel generates a random initial structure.
    Finally, the fluid of greater density ?D (brine),
    which constitutes the dense layer, reaches a
    height hD and is coloured with sodium
    fluorescent (at low concentration as a passive
    tracer).
  • The experiment begins when the dense fluid flows
    forming jets and it impinges on the CMC gel
    layer, breaks down its surface tension and goes
    through the gel locally. The high gel viscosity
    (from 16000 cps to 44000 cps) and the small width
    of the gel layer make that the dense fluid flows
    in the laminar regime. There is no mixing between
    the dense fluid and the CMC gel.

BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
7
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

EXPERIMENTAL SETUP FOR EXPERIMENTS WITH A CMC GEL
LAYER
  • Finally, the dense fluid comes into the light
    fluid layer and it generates several forced
    plumes which are gravitationally unstable. This
    development is caused by the lateral interaction
    between these plumes at the complex fractal
    surface between the dense and light fluids.
  • As the turbulent plumes develop, the dense fluid
    comes into contact with the light fluid layer and
    the mixing process grows.
  • The final result of the mixing process is a
    heavier mixed layer located at the bottom of the
    container.
  • As the turbulence decays, a stable situation with
    internal waves takes place.
  • The mixed layer is separated from the non mixed
    light fluid by a stable and sharp density
    interface which final height is the mixed layer
    height hM

BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
8
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

EXPERIMENTAL SETUP FOR EXPERIMENTS WITH A CMC GEL
LAYER
MAIN CHARACTERISTIC OF EXPERIMENTS
TWO METACRYLIC BOXES WHOSE BOTTOMS ARE
ALTERNATIVELY PIERCED WITH ORIFICES
THE CMC GEL LAYER

The CMC gel is a non-newtonian time dependent
fluid and presents thyxotropic behaviour.
(a)
(b)
Thyxotropic behaviour of the sodiumcarboximethyl
gel. (a) Time evolution of the gel viscosity for
the more viscous gel (curve 1, ?) and for the
less viscous one (curve 2, ?) with a rotation
speed of 0.6 rpm. (b) Evolution of the gel
viscosity with the shear rate for the less
viscous gel.
BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
9
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

EXPERIMENTAL SETUP FOR EXPERIMENTS WITH A GEL
LAYER
  • If there is a gel layer, there is a random
    initial distribution of 2D-plume array.
    Therefore, we dont control the number of plumes
    nP and their location.
  • If there is a gel layer, the mixing efficiency ?
    and the mixed layer height hNM are smaller, as
    some graphical results will show later.
  • We use two metacrylic boxes whose bottoms are
    alternatively pierced to locate the denser fluid
    layer. These pierced bottoms can control the
    number and geometry of the plumes, but the CMC
    gel layer will randomize the initial distribution
    in a way in which the initial conditions
    (viscosity of gel) are seen to modify the overall
    mixing efficiency.

BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
10
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

THE TWO METACRYLIC BOXES WHOSE BOTTOMS ARE
ALTERNATIVELY PIERCED WITH ORIFICES WHOSE
POSITION CAN BE REGULATED. These boxes contain
the fluid of greater density ?D which constitutes
the dense layer and is coloured with sodium
fluorescein (a passive tracer).






PUSH
WITHDRAWAL VELOCITY OF THE PLASTIC, Vp
THE BOTTOM HOLES OF THE METACRYLIC BOXES ARE NOT
SUPERIMPOSED CLOSED POSITION
THE BOTTOM HOLES OF THE METACRYLIC BOXES ARE
SUPERIMPOSED OPENED POSITION
BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
11
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

PARTIAL MIXING PROCESS WITH A BIDIMENSIONAL PLUME
ARRAY AND A GEL LAYER
  • PARTIAL MIXING EVENT WITH THE LESS VISCOUS GEL
    ?Gel 1.02 g/cm3 and A0.134
  • Initial experimental state (0 s).
  • Starting of turbulent plumes (0.24 s).
  • Development of the turbulent plumes (0.32 s).
  • Lateral and front interactions between the
    turbulent plumes (0.64 s).
  • Interaction of the fluid system with the physical
    contours of the container (1.00 s).
  • Final state after the partial mixing process
    (96.70 s).

t 0.32 s
t 0.60 s
t 1.01 s
t 1.61 s
  • PARTIAL MIXING EVENT WITH THE MOST VISCOUS GEL
    ?Gel 1.03 g/cm3 and A0.130
  • Small protuberance in the CMC gel layer (0.32 s).
  • Appearance of two gel protuberances which fill up
    with the denser fluid (0.60 s).
  • Breakup of one of the protuberances through a
    turbulent plume (1.01 s).
  • Simultaneous growth of the plume and the
    protuberance which is emptying and distorting the
    CMC gel layer at the same time. New turbulent
    plumes begin (1.61 s).

t 0 s
t 0.24 s
t 0.32 s
t 0.64 s
t 1.00 s
t 96.70 s
BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
12
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

PARTIAL MIXING PROCESS WITH A BIDIMENSIONAL PLUME
ARRAY AND A GEL LAYER
  • Frame sequence of an experimental mixing process
    whose experimental characteristics are ?Gel1.02
    g/cm3, µGel 16000 cps and A0.019 .
  • Start of the time evolution of the mixing process
    with several turbulent plumes which are clearly
    separated (t 0.28 s).
  • Vertical development of the plumes. There is no
    protuberance in the CMC gel layer (t 0.40 s).
  • The lateral interaction of turbulent plumes
    starts while they are growing (t 0.56 s).
  • The lateral interaction between turbulent plumes
    is greater than in (c) (t 0.80 s).
  • The mixing convective front evolves through the
    light fluid layer. General interaction between
    plumes (t 1.44 s).
  • Non uniform evolution of the mixing convective
    front. The interaction of the fluid system with
    the contours of the container starts (t 2.36 s).
  • A gravity current develops through the light
    fluid layer. This gravity current reaches the
    front of the experimental container (t 4.76 s).
  • The mixing process fills the volume of the
    experimental container. Incipient formation of
    the mixed layer (t 11.96 s).
  • Final state after the partial mixing process. We
    can observe the mixing layer limited by the
    stable density interface (t 94 s).

BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
13
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  1. FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  2. FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  3. CONCLUSIONS
  • These figures show a turbulent mixing process
    with the most viscous CMC gel (µGel44000 cps)
    and the Atwood number is A 0.130. And another
    mixing process with the less viscous gel
    (µGel16000 cps) and the Atwood number is A
    0.134. Both Atwood numbers are almost equal
    because we want to just describe the gel effect.

ATWOOD NUMBER INFLUENCE
GEL INFLUENCE
As the gel viscosity is reduced, the probability
of initial generation of gel protuberances is
reduced and the formation of turbulent plumes
increases.
We observe that the number of turbulent plumes is
greater if the Atwood number grows which implies
that there is a greater quantity of mixed fluid.
THE BEHAVIOUR OF THE FLUID SYSTEM IS
INFLUENCED BY SEVERAL FACTORS
ATWOOD NUMBER, A
INITIAL POTENTIAL ENERGY
GEL VISCOSTY, ?G
NUMBER OF PLUMES, nP
BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
14
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  1. FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  2. FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  3. CONCLUSIONS

THE BEHAVIOUR OF THE FLUID SYSTEM IS
INFLUENCED BY SEVERAL FACTORS
ATWOOD NUMBER, A
INITIAL POTENTIAL ENERGY
GEL VISCOSTY, ?G
NUMBER OF PLUMES, nP
INFLUENCE ON FRACTAL STRUCTURE ?
INFLUENCE ON THE OVERALL MIXING
MIXED LAYER HEIGHT, hM
RELATION?
MIXING EFFICENCY, ?
BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
15
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  1. FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  2. FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  3. CONCLUSIONS

TO STUDY BETTER THE FOLLOWING RELATIONSHIPS
ATWOOD NUMBER, A
MIXING EFFICENCY, ?
INITIAL POTENTIAL ENERGY
MIXED LAYER HEIGHT, hM
NUMBER OF PLUMES, nP
INFLUENCE ON THE FRACTAL STRUCTURE ?
NEW EXPERIMENTS WITH A LINE PLUME ARRAY AND
WITHOUT A GEL LAYER
BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
16
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

EXPERIMENTAL SETUP FOR EXPERIMENTS WITHOUT A GEL
LAYER
BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
17
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

EXPERIMENTAL SETUP FOR EXPERIMENTS WITHOUT A GEL
LAYER
  • If there is not a gel layer, there is not a
    random initial distribution of plumes.
  • We dont use the viscoelastic gel because we
    want to control the number of plumes and their
    geometric configuration into a line array
  • one plume
  • two plumes
  • three plumes
  • ......
  • ......
  • and nine plumes.
  • We can control the geometric setup of the plumes
    by means of the orifices located at the bottoms
    of the two metacrylic boxes.
  • If there is not a gel layer, the mixing
    efficiency ? and the mixed layer height hNM are
    greater.

BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
18
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

THE TWO METACRYLIC BOXES WHOSE ARE ALTERNATIVELY
PIERCED WITH ORIFICES WHOSE POSITION CAN BE
REGULATED. These boxes contain the fluid of
greater density ?D which constitutes the dense
layer and is coloured with sodium fluorescein (a
passive tracer).






PUSH
WITHDRAWAL VELOCITY OF THE PLASTIC, Vp
THE BOTTOM HOLES OF THE METACRYLIC BOXES ARE NOT
SUPERIMPOSED CLOSED POSITION
THE BOTTOM HOLES OF THE METACRYLIC BOXES ARE
SUPERIMPOSED OPENED POSITION
BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
19
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  1. FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  2. FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  3. CONCLUSIONS

DIFFERENT HOLE GEOMETRIES
DIFFERENTS PLUME GEOMETRIES
1 PLUME GEOMETRY
9 PLUME GEOMETRY





ONE OPEN HOLE (IN GREEN)
NINE OPEN HOLES (IN GREEN)
BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
20
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS MIXED LAYER HEIGHT
Behaviour of the non dimensional height of the
mixed layer with the Atwood number for
experiments made with the most viscous CMC gel
(Curve 1, ?), and with the less viscous one
(Curve 2, ?). The figure shows the linear fits
done.
  • The mixed layer height hM was measured
    experimentally and it is directly proportional to
    the final quantity, or volume, of the mixed
    fluid. The volume of the mixed fluid increases as
    the Atwood number grows and, consequently, the
    height of the mixed layer, hM, is greater. In
    other words, as the buoyancy effect increases so
    does the convective turbulent mixing and the
    mixed layer height.
  • The effect of the gel viscosity may also be
    observed in this figure. The height hM increases
    if the gel used is the less viscous one because
    the number of turbulent plumes is greater when
    the gel viscosity is reduced.

BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
21
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS MIXING EFFICENCY
Mean mixing efficiency versus the Atwood number
for experiments made with the most viscous CMC
gel (Curve 1, ?), and with the less viscous one
(Curve 2, ?). The corresponding empirical fits
are shown.
  • The mixing process is only partial and we can
    analyze the mixing efficiency ?, which is defined
    as the fraction of the available energy used to
    mix fluids
  • We observe that the efficiency increases as the
    Atwood number A does which, physically, implies
    that the buoyancy effect grows and it produces a
    greater mixing process with a greater efficiency.
  • Besides, Curve 2 shows that mixing efficiency is
    greater forh the less viscous gel if we compare
    it to experiments made with the most viscous gel
    (curve 1).

BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
22
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS MIXING EFFICENCY
Behaviour of the mean mixing efficiency versus
the Atwood number considering the mixed layer
homogeneous (Curve A,?) and stratified with two
layers (Curve B, ?) corresponding to experiments
made with the most viscous CMC gel.
  • The final mixed layer is stratified because the
    final density profiles show a strong density
    step, and, therefore we assume that the
    stratification of this mixed layer is made up by
    two layers.
  • If the final profile is stratified, then the
    mixing efficiency is about 0.17 and it has an
    upper limit of 0.18.
  • Other scientific works state that the maximum
    mixing efficiency is reached when the final
    profile is totally mixed and homogeneous this
    value is 0.5.

BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
23
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS MIXING EFFICENCY
OUR MIXING EFFICIENCY IS ABOUT 20 OF THE MAXIMUM
MIXING EFFICIENCY IN SIMILAR EXPERIMENTS
THE EFFECT OF THE TURBULENT PLUME ARRAY
THE EFFECT OF THE GEL VISCOSTY, ?G
THE GEL LAYER REDUCES MIXING EFFICIENCY ABOUT
40 IF WE COMPARE IT TO EXPERIMENTS WITHOUT GEL.
DYNAMICS OF THE TURBULENT PLUMES
THE NUMBER OF THE PLUMES
BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
24
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS MIXING EFFICENCY
Mean mixing efficiency ? versus the Atwood
number A for experiments made with the most
viscous CMC gel (µGel 44000 cps, Curve 1, ?),
with the less viscous one (µGel 16000 cps, Curve
2, ?) and without gel (Curve 3, ?).
  • This figure shows that the gel layer reduces
    mixing efficiency about 40 if we compare it to
    experiments without gel.

BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
25
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

THE EFFECT OF THE TURBULENT PLUME ARRAY
DYNAMICS OF THE TURBULENT PLUMES
The two-dimensional plume array makes a conical
volume without mixing as the figure shows because
once the dense fluid looses its potential energy
it may not mix with the lighter fluid above.
There is an interpenetration of the unstable
plumes only through a fraction of the area at the
top. Therefore, the denser fluid and the lighter
one do not mix completely.
This non-mixing volume makes the mixing
efficiency decrease. All turbulent plumes feed on
the ambient light fluid. As a consequence there
is a height h which represents the start of plume
lateral interaction which determines the
non-mixing volume. The start time of lateral
interaction ranges from 1.042 s for a two plumes
experiment to 0.336 s for a nine plumes
experiment.
BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
26
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

THE EFFECT OF THE TURBULENT PLUME ARRAY
Vertical development of the turbulent plumes with
a superimposed scheme which represents their
initial growth. Every plume is represented by a
cone which radius is the plume radius, R. The
lateral interaction between plumes starts at a
depth h.
The non-dimensional mixing volume
  • Represents the decrease of the mixing volume if
    the height ratios h/hL increases because plumes
    reach a larger depth without interacting. The
    greater mixing volume appears as soon as the
    plumes interact. The non-dimensional mixing
    volume varies from 86 if the height ratios is
    (h/hL)1/5 to 66 if (h/hL)1/2.
  • The non-mixing volume VNON-MIXING has the
    opposite behaviour which influences the mixing
    efficiency.
  • We demonstrate that the dynamical behaviour of
    plumes reduces the mixing efficiency because they
    generate a smaller volume useful to mix.

BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
27
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

THE EFFECT OF THE TURBULENT PLUME ARRAY
THE NUMBER OF TURBULENT PLUMES
The second hypothesis to understand our mixing
efficiency values is that the mixing efficiency
increases if the number of turbulent plumes is
greater.
To verify this hypothesis, we perform new
experiments with a line of plumes from one to
nine plumes- as described before. The new
experiments are performed without using the
viscoeleastic gel because we want to control the
number of plumes and their geometric
configuration into a line array.
We want to investigate more in depth the relation
between the non-mixing volume VNON-MIXING, the
number of plumes nP and the mixing efficiency ?
and to evaluate the result the lower the gel
viscosity, the higher the mixing efficiency is.
If the gel viscosity is reduced, the number of
plumes np increases. Therefore, it might exist a
relation between the mixing efficiency and the
number of plumes.
BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
28
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

THE EFFECT OF THE TURBULENT PLUME ARRAY
THE NUMBER OF TURBULENT PLUMES
The mixing efficiency ? is related to the mixing
volume VMIXING and is also related to the
inverse of the non-mixing volume VNON-MIXING
which can be represented by the non-mixing
height, hNM. For these reasons, we measure,
directly from the digitalisations of the
experiments, the nonmixing height and we relate
it to the number of plumes. The new results are
shown in this figure.
Graphic behaviour of the non-mixing height, hNM,
versus the number of plumes, np. If the number of
plumes, np, is greater, the non-mixing height
decreases and, therefore, the non-mixing volume
also decreases. Then the mixing efficiency is
greater which agrees with the results deduced
before.
BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
29
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • Fractal studies provide a natural method for
    analyzing turbulent fields like plumes and their
    turbulent cascade processes.
  • If there is a subrange where production and
    dissipation are at equilibrium, it is possible a
    functional relation between the exponent ? of the
    spectral density function and the fractal
    dimension D of the scalar field represented in
    the images
  • The last aim is to investigate the intermittency
    of the mixing plumes (measuring the maximum
    fractal dimension and using results of another
    researchers relating to the sixth and third order
    structure function scaling exponents).

BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
30
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • We investigate the fractal structure of non
    homogeneous plumes affected by different levels
    of buoyancy (different values of the Atwood
    number A ), initial potential energy (several
    initial heights Ho of the source) and for
    different number of plumes, np (from one to
    nine).
  • Fractal characterization of dispersing plumes
    like scalar concentration fields is imperfect but
    is a preliminary step toward a general
    multifractal description. Fractal dimensions
    between 1.3 and 1.35 are obtained from box
    counting methods for free convection and neutral
    boundary layers. Other results have been
    published which use the box counting method to
    analyze images of jet sections produced from LIF
    techniques- and determined that the fractal
    dimension of jet boundaries was 1.36
  • The fractal and multifractal analysis of the
    turbulent convective plumes was performed with
    the box counting algorithm for different
    intensities of evolving plume images using the
    special software Ima_Calc.

BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
31
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

FRACTAL RESULTS 1 PLUME EXPERIMENT





t 0.168 s
t 0.168 s
t 0.262 s
t 0.420 s
t 0.748 s
t 1.0 s
BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
32
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

FRACTAL RESULTS 1 PLUME EXPERIMENT
  • Time evolution of a plume through its frame
    sequence corresponding to experiments made with
    A0.03.
  • The first column of the figure shows the time
    evolution of the one plume experiment with its
    time frame.
  • The second column is the selected region of
    interest.
  • The third column represents the corresponding
    histogram which allows us to define the intensity
    or grey level range to study.
  • The fourth column is the fractal dimension or
    the plot of N(d) versus d.
  • Finally, the fifth column shows the multifractal
    results, i.e, the change of the fractal dimension
    related to the grey level.
  • The relation
  • is used to determine the fractal dimension D
    (box-counting dimension) of the plume boundary by
    a regression line fit through the box-counting
    results.

BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
33
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

FRACTAL RESULTS 1 PLUME EXPERIMENT
This curve represents the time evolution of the
fractal dimension D corresponding to one plume
experiment with Atwood number A0.03. At early
stages, the fractal dimension has large changes.
Later, it tends towards a value between 1.2 and
1.3.
The study indicates a mean fractal dimension of
1.23 for the one plume experiment.
As the turbulent plume is evolving, we can do a
multifractal analysis. This figure shows the time
evolution of the multifractal results for the
same plume with Atwood number A0.03 We can
observe there is a similar behavior at all
selected times.
BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
34
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  1. FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  2. FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  3. CONCLUSIONS

FRACTAL RESULTS 9 PLUME EXPERIMENT
  • To verify if the number of plumes np affects the
    global mixing effiency ? and the fractal
    dimension, we perform experiments with a plume
    geometric setup into a line from one to nine
    plumes-.
  • Time evolution of nine plume experiment through
    its frame sequence corresponding to experiments
    made with A0.03.
  • There is a lateral interaction between plumes as
    they evolve. As a consequence, it appears a
    joined convective front which time evolution is
    showed in the first column of the following
    figure.
  • The second column represents the selected region
    of interest of the front.
  • The third column is the corresponding histogram
    which allow us to define the intensity or grey
    level range to study.
  • The fourth column shows the results of the
    multifractal analysis of the interest region
    which shows the behavior of the fractal dimension
    versus the intensity level.

BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
35
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

FRACTAL RESULTS 9 PLUME EXPERIMENT





t 0.336 s
t 0.504 s
t 0.630 s
t 0.706 s
t 0.850 s
BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
36
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

FRACTAL RESULTS 9 PLUME EXPERIMENT
This figure shows the time evolution of the
fractal dimension D associated to the convective
front. Before 0.336 s there is no fractal
dimension because there are individual turbulent
plumes and not a convective front. The front
fractal dimension has great changes and it is not
clear it tends towards a limit.
Non Convective Front
The study indicate a mean fractal dimension of
1.082 for the nine plume experiment.
As the front grows, this figure represents the
time evolution of the front multifractal results.
The behavior is similar at all times with a
nearly plane region from lower intensities to 180
grey level. Afterwards, there is a decrease of
the fractal dimension at (180, 220) grey range
and, finally, it increases towards a maximum at
higher intensities.
BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
37
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

CONCLUSIONS
  • To properly understand atmospheric and oceanic
    turbulence, for example, a deep understanding of
    the mixing processes is first required.
  • The global conclusions of this experiment are
    related to the mixing efficiency and the volume
    of the final mixed layer as functions of the
    Atwood number, the gel viscosity and the number
    of plumes.
  • We have verified that the initial conditions
    modify the overall mixing efficiency, i. e., the
    number of plumes affects the mixing efficiency
    because if the number of plumes decreases, the
    mixing effiency also diminishes because the
    non-mixing height increases.

BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
38
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MIXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

CONCLUSIONS
  • We compare the fractal results corresponding to
    one plume and nine plume experiments with the
    same Atwood number A 0.03. First, the mean value
    of the fractal dimenson for the convective front
    of the nine plume experiment (1.082) is lower
    than the mean value of the one plume setup (1.23)
    which it is closer to the results of other
    researchers.
  • We also can compare the multifractal results.
    There is a clear difference at lower intensities
    (below 180) because the fractal dimension of the
    one plume experiment has not a nearly plane
    region. Later, the multifractal behaviour is more
    similar because it increases in both experiments.
  • Finally, we can compare the time evolution of
    the fractal dimension D. As mentioned before, the
    fractal dimension corresponding to the one plume
    experiment tends towards a limit value. This
    behaviour is not the same for the convective
    front of the nine plume experiment which fractal
    dimension changes.

BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
39
  1. INTRODUCTION AND AIMS
  2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
  3. PLUME ARRAY MXING PROCESSES
  4. GLOBAL MIXING RESULTS
  • FRACTAL ANALYSIS
  • FRACTAL AND MULTIFRACTAL RESULTS
  • CONCLUSIONS

IF YOU WANT MORE INFORMATION P. López
González-Nieto Dpto. Física de la Tierra,
Astronomía y Astrofísica II Avda. Ciudad
Universitaria s/n. 28040 Madrid ?
maplopez_at_bio.ucm.es azufre2_at_hotmail.com ?
913945072
BUOYANT MIXING PROCESSES AND STRUCTURE IN
TURBULENT JETS
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