Axisymmetric Ferrofluid Oscillations in a Cylindrical Tank in Microgravity

The sloshing of liquids in low-gravity entails several technical challenges for spacecraft designers due to its effects on the dynamics and operation of space vehicles. Magnetic settling forces may be employed to position a susceptible liquid and address these issues. Although proposed in the early...

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Veröffentlicht in:Microgravity science and technology 2021-08, Vol.33 (4), Article 50
Hauptverfasser: Romero-Calvo, Álvaro, Herrada, Miguel Ángel, Hermans, Tim H. J., Benítez, Lidia Parrilla, Cano-Gómez, Gabriel, Castro-Hernández, Elena
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The sloshing of liquids in low-gravity entails several technical challenges for spacecraft designers due to its effects on the dynamics and operation of space vehicles. Magnetic settling forces may be employed to position a susceptible liquid and address these issues. Although proposed in the early 1960s, this approach remains largely unexplored. In this paper, the equilibrium meniscus and axisymmetric oscillations of a ferrofluid solution in a cylindrical tank are studied for the first time while subject to a static inhomogeneous magnetic field in microgravity. Coupled fluid-magnetic simulations from a recently developed inviscid magnetic sloshing model are compared with measurements collected at ZARM’s drop tower during the ESA Drop Your Thesis! 2017 campaign. The importance of the fluid-magnetic interaction is explored by means of an alternative uncoupled framework for diluted magnetic solutions. The coupled model shows a better agreement with experimental results in the determination of the magnetic deformation trend of the meniscus, but the uncoupled framework gives a better prediction of the magnetic frequency response which finds no theoretical justification. Although larger datasets are required to perform a robust point-by-point validation, these results hint at the existence of unmodeled physical effects in the system.
ISSN:0938-0108
1875-0494
DOI:10.1007/s12217-021-09894-4