Abstract

An experimental investigation was performed on a swirling flow of dilute surfactant solution with deformed free-surface in a cylindrical container driven by the constantly rotating bottom wall. The purpose of the experiment was to estimate weak viscoelasticity in the tested surfactant solutions as well as to investigate the flow characteristics. The tested fluid was an aqueous solution of CTAC (CTAC: cetyltrimethyl ammonium chloride), which is a cationic surfactant. Water, 40 ppm, 60 ppm and 200 ppm CTAC solution flows were tested at Froude numbers ranging from 2.59 to 16.3. Particle image velocimetry (PIV) was used to measure the secondary velocity field in the meridional plane. The deformed free-surface level was extracted from the PIV images. At a similar Froude number, the depth of the dip formed at the center region of the free surface was decreased for CTAC solution flow compared with water flow. The inertia-driven vortex at the up-right corner in the meridional plane becomes more and more weakened with increase of the solution concentration or viscoelasticity. Through analyzing the overall force balance compared with water flow, the first normal stress difference characterizing the viscoelasticity was estimated for the dilute CTAC solution flows. The result supports the viscoelasticity-based turbulent drag-reduction mechanism of surfactant solution flow.

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