Abstract

Results steming from the linear stability of time-periodic flows in a Taylor–Couette geometry with cylinders oscillating in phase or out-of-phase are presented. Our analysis takes into account the gap size effects and investigates the influence of a superimposed mean angular rotation of the whole system. In case of no mean rotation, the finite gap geometry is found to affect the shape of the stability diagrams (critical Taylor number versus the frequency parameter) which consist of two distinct branches as opposed to being continuous in the narrow gap approximation. In particular, in the out-of-phase configuration a new branch for low frequencies was found, thus enabling better agreement with available experimental results. When cylinders are co-rotating and subject to rotation effects, our calculations provide the evolution of the critical Taylor number versus the rotation number for two values of the frequency. The stability curves are found to be in qualitative agreement with available experimental data revealing a maximum of instability for a rotation number of about 0.3. In the high rotation regime, enhancement of the critical Taylor number is investigated through an asymptotic analysis and the value of the rotation number at which restabilization occurs is found to depend on the frequency parameter. A restabilization of the flow also occurs when the rotation number and the gap size are of the same order, a phenomenon already pointed out in the case of steady flows and attributed to the near cancellation of Coriolis and centrifugal effects. Our investigation proves that the same mechanism still holds for time-periodic flows.

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