Heat transport by bubbles in vertical natural convection

ORAL

Abstract

We consider a basic configuration of bubbles in vertical natural convection. The datasets are obtained from direct numerical simulations for one decade of Rayleigh numbers, a Prandtl number of 7 and the bubbles are simulated with immersed boundaries using the interaction potential approach. By separately enabling the thermal and mechanical coupling, we show evidence that the heat transport is enhanced when the bubbles are both thermally and mechanically coupled to the flow. When only pure mechanical coupling is considered, we instead find a lower heat flux in the system. The enhanced heat flux from the addition of thermal coupling highlights the importance of thermal transport by bubbles in this setup. To shed light on the details of the mechanism, we discuss the contributions to the heat flux with reference to local statistics of the thermal boundary layers.

*This work is part of the research programme of the Foundation for Fundamental Research on Matter (FOM) with project number 16DDS001, which is financially supported by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO).

Authors

  • Chong Shen Ng

    • University of Twente
  • Roberto Verzicco

    • Physics of Fluids Group and Max Planck Center Twente, MESA+ Institute and J. M. Burgers Centre for Fluid Dynamics, University of Twente, P.O. Box 217,
    • Univ of Rome
    • Uniroma2, UTwente, GSSI
    • University of Rome ‘Tor Vergata’
    • University of Roma
    • Univ of Rome Tor Vergata, Univ of Twente
    • uniroma2
  • Detlef Lohse

    • Physics of Fluids Group and Max Planck Center Twente, MESA+ Institute and J. M. Burgers Centre for Fluid Dynamics, University of Twente, P.O. Box 217,
    • Physics of Fluids group, University of Twente
    • Physics of Fluids Group, University of Twente
    • Univ of Twente
    • PoF - University of Twente, The Netherlands
    • Twente University
    • Physics of Fluids Group, University of Twente; Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization
    • University of Twente