[go: up one dir, main page]

Paper

Diffusion-limited mixing by incompressible flows

and

Published 16 April 2018 © 2018 IOP Publishing Ltd & London Mathematical Society
, , Citation Christopher J Miles and Charles R Doering 2018 Nonlinearity 31 2346DOI 10.1088/1361-6544/aab1c8

0951-7715/31/5/2346

Abstract

Incompressible flows can be effective mixers by appropriately advecting a passive tracer to produce small filamentation length scales. In addition, diffusion is generally perceived as beneficial to mixing due to its ability to homogenize a passive tracer. However we provide numerical evidence that, in cases where advection and diffusion are both actively present, diffusion may produce negative effects by limiting the mixing effectiveness of incompressible optimal flows. This limitation appears to be due to the presence of a limiting length scale given by a generalised Batchelor length (Batchelor 1959 J. Fluid Mech. 5 113–33). This length scale limitation may in turn affect long-term mixing rates. More specifically, we consider local-in-time flow optimisation under energy and enstrophy flow constraints with the objective of maximising the mixing rate. We observe that, for enstrophy-bounded optimal flows, the strength of diffusion may not impact the long-term mixing rate. For energy-constrained optimal flows, however, an increase in the strength of diffusion can decrease the mixing rate. We provide analytical lower bounds on mixing rates and length scales achievable under related constraints (point-wise bounded speed and rate-of-strain) by extending the work of Lin et al (2011 J. Fluid Mech. 675 465–76) and Poon (1996 Commun. PDE 21 521–39).

Export citation and abstractBibTeXRIS

Access this article

The computer you are using is not registered by an institution with a subscription to this article. Please choose one of the options below.

Purchase from

Article Galaxy
CCC RightFind

Purchase this article from our trusted document delivery partners.

Make a recommendation

To gain access to this content, please complete the Recommendation Form and we will follow up with your librarian or Institution on your behalf.

For corporate researchers we can also follow up directly with your R&D manager, or the information management contact at your company. Institutional subscribers have access to the current volume, plus a 10-year back file (where available).

CHORUS: Clearinghouse for the Open Research of the United States. Opens in new tabView accepted manuscriptopens in new tab

Public access to this accepted manuscript is provided under the agreement with CHORUSopens in new tab