Abstract

Experiments are carried out to study the flow establishment phase inside closed cavities submitted to the impulsive translation from rest, of one of their walls at a Reynolds number of 1000. Three standard industrially machined or molded cylindrical cavity shapes are studied and are compared with respect to the efficiency of mixing process: square, rectangular and semi-circular of length-to-width ratio of 2:1. The flow structures in the mid-cross-section are analysed by means of fine topological and kinematic visualization series using two complementary techniques: continuous dye filament and discrete solid tracers both coupled with a laser sheet illumination. Particular attention is given to vorticity propagation and primary/secondary eddy formations. Although a roughly similar vortex generation is observed in all examined cavities, important differences appear with time. The semi-circular cavity flow results in a much more homogeneous and uniform recirculation with no secondary flow recirculation zone. On the contrary, the square and rectangular cavity flows develop a better flow mass dispersion and, respectively, one and two secondary eddies. At the final time of observation (t*=12), both semi-circular and rectangular cavity flows seem to reach their steady state whereas the square one continues to evolve. Comparisons with 2-D computational results of other authors illustrate the three-dimensional flow aspect present in experiments.

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