Skip to main content
  • Home
  • Happenings
  • Events
  • Effects of Schmidt number on local instabilities in stratified vortices
Effects of Schmidt number on local instabilities in stratified vortices

Effects of Schmidt number on local instabilities in stratified vortices

Date6th Nov 2020

Time02:30 PM

Venue Google meet

PAST EVENT

Details

Fluid flows with vortices are common observations in daily life. From wash basin vortices to oceanic eddies and cyclones, vortical structures can reside in a wide range of scales. In engineering flows vortices usually form behind solid objects moving in a fluid medium
(e.g. wingtip vortices in aircraft wakes). Instabilities in vortices have hence been studied extensively, owing to their fundamental and applied consequences. Small-scale linear instabilities have characteristic wavelengths smaller than the dominant vortex length scale. These short-wavelength instabilities are a mechanism by which three-dimensional features arise in large-scale two-dimensional flows, thus having implications in turbulent flows. Density stratification is a factor that influences vortex instability characteristics, in geophysical and aircraft wake applications for example.
We present a local stability analysis to investigate the effects of differential diffusion between momentum and density (quantified by the Schmidt number Sc) on the three-dimensional, short-wavelength instabilities in planar vortices with a uniform stable stratification along the vorticity axis. Assuming small diffusion in both momentum and density, but arbitrary values for Sc, we present a detailed analytical/numerical analysis for three different classes of base flows: (a) an axisymmetric vortex, (b) an elliptical vortex, and (c) the flow in the neighbourhood of a hyperbolic stagnation point. While a centrifugally stable axisymmetric vortex remains stable for any Sc, it is shown that Sc can have significant effects in a centrifugally unstable axisymmetric vortex: the range of unstable perturbations increases when Sc is taken away from unity, with the extent of increase being larger for Sc > 1. Additionally, for Sc > 1, we report the possibility of oscillatory instability. In an elliptical vortex with a stable stratification, Sc not equal to one is shown to non-trivially influence the three different inviscid instabilities (subharmonic, fundamental and superharmonic) that have been previously reported, and also introduce a new branch of oscillatory instability that is not present at Sc = 1. We conclude by discussing the physical length-scales associated with the Sc-not-equal-to-one instabilities, and their potential relevance in various realistic settings.

Speakers

Mr. Suraj Singh (AE14D411)

Aerospace Engineering