Abstract

The nonlinear stability of the natural convection in a vertical fluid layer between two flat plates with different temperatures is investigated by a direct method to find the equilibrium states of the secondary convection. We confine ourselves to two-dimensional flows and assume that the aspect ratio of the fluid layer is very large. Since the Prantl number is assumed to be very small, the buoyancy effect caused by temperature disturbances is negligible. As a result we obtained a neutral surface of the energy of the fundamental mode of the secondary convection. It is concluded that there is no finite amplitude instability below the critical Grashof number derived from linear stability theory, and that both the unstable equilibrium solution (threshold amplitude solution) and the stable equilibrium solution (finite amplitude solution) are found outside the neutral curve of the linear stability. Our results are almost consistent with those of Nagata and Busse (1983), but are more accurate and more thorough.

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