Inertial effects on acoustic Rayleigh streaming flow: Transient and established regimes

The effect of inertia on Rayleigh streaming generated inside a cylindrical resonator where a mono-frequency standing wave is imposed, is investigated numerically and experimentally. To this effect, time evolutions of streaming cells in the near wall region and in the resonator core are analyzed. An...

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Veröffentlicht in:Wave motion 2017-11, Vol.74, p.1-17
Hauptverfasser: Daru, Virginie, Weisman, Catherine, Baltean-Carlès, Diana, Reyt, Ida, Bailliet, Hélène
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The effect of inertia on Rayleigh streaming generated inside a cylindrical resonator where a mono-frequency standing wave is imposed, is investigated numerically and experimentally. To this effect, time evolutions of streaming cells in the near wall region and in the resonator core are analyzed. An analogy with the lid-driven cavity in a cylindrical geometry is presented in order to analyze the physical meanings of the characteristic times. Inertial effects on the established streaming flow pattern are then investigated numerically using a code solving the time averaged Navier–Stokes compressible equations, where a mono-frequency acoustic flow field is used to compute the source terms. It is shown that inertia of streaming cannot be considered as the leading phenomenon to explain the mutation of streaming at high acoustic levels. •Nonlinear inertial effects produce patterns different from DNS and experiments.•Time evolutions of streaming cells near the wall and in the core are analyzed.•The full streaming equations are solved numerically to obtain the established flow.•Nonlinear inertial effects produce patterns different from DNS and experiments.•Nonlinear inertial effects cannot explain the mutation of streaming at high levels.
ISSN:0165-2125
1878-433X
DOI:10.1016/j.wavemoti.2017.06.001