INT. COMM. HEAT M A S S T R A N S F E R Vol.
12, pp. 149-158,
1985
~P~rganDnPress
0735-1933/85 $3.00 + .00 Ltd. Printed in the United States
ON DOUBLE DIFFUSION IN A BRINKMAN HEAT GENERATING POROUS LAYER
Bill Selimos and Dimos Poulikakos University of Illinois at Chicago Department of Mechanical Engineering P.O. Box 4348 Chicago, Illinois 60680
( C ~ i ~ n i c a t e d by J.P. Hartnett and W.J. Minkowycz)
ABSTRACT This paper relies on linear M%~bility analysis to define the parametric domain in which c0nve~ti~e motions exist in a horizontal unstably stratified p o r o ~ layer. The paper focuses on the combined effect of three distinct factors on the onset of convection: the presence of a second diffusing component (in addition to heat), the presence of internal heat generation in the porous medium and the departure from the Darcy model of flow in porous medittm by using Brinkman's modification of Darcy's law. Introduction The classical "Benard" problem in porous media is the determination of the onset of convective instabilities
in a fluid saturated porous layer
heated from below and cooled from above so that a linear temperature profile is established in the pure conduction state. stability analysis)
The first theoretical
(linear
solutions of the above problem were obtained by Horton
and Rogers EI~ and were motivated by geophysical
considerations.
During
recent years, a number of studies aimed to extent the results in E1,23 and to establish the effect of a number of phenomena on the critical Rayleigh number describing the onset of convection.
The majority of these investi-
gations are concerned with the following three phenomena as they relate to the onset of convection in a porous layer:
the presence of internal heat
generation in the porous matrix
[3-53, the presence of a second diffusing
component
[6-83, and the use of flow models for the
(in addition to heat)
porous layer valid for a wide range of pore diameters,
to improve the pre-
dictions of the commonly used Darcy model, which is valid as long as the size of the pore is relatively small compared to the dimensions of the layer [ 9 - I ~ 149
150
B. Selimos and D. Poulikakos
Vol.
12, No. 2
The main objective of the present study is to address the topic of the combined effect of the above three distinct factors on the onset of convection.
Eventhough the effect of internal heat generation or the effect of
double diffusion or the effect of Brinkman's modification
alone on the onset
of convection has been investigated [3-113, to the authors'
knowledge the
combined effect of all three phenomena has not been determined yet.
The
present paper relies on the formalism of linear stability analysis to study the impact of the above three mechanisms, marginal stability boundaries overstability
acting simultaneously,
for stationary convection.
on the
The phenomenon of
(which is a possibility due to the presence of a second dif-
fusing component)
has not been investigated Mathematical
The configuration
in the course of this study.
Formulation
of interest consists of a heat generating horizontal
porous layer bounded from above and below by two impermeable boundaries. These boundaries
are kept at constant temperature and species concentration.
According to Brinkman's modification
of Darcy's flow model El0,113,
equations describing the conservation of mass, momentum,
the
energy and species
at each point in the porous layer are: V • u = 0 VP =
(i) -
(2)
~T ~ ~ O ~ + u " VT = d V2T + ( O C p ) f l u i d
(3)
~~S
[
+
~
•
(T-To) + 7
?S
=
V2s
D
(4)
s
The various symbols in the above equations are defined in the nomenclature. The effective viscosity in the porous bed, ~, may not, in general, be e q u a l to the fluid viscosity.
Various models EI2~ have been postulated
to determine the effective viscosity.
in order '
Most of these models are elaborate
and it has been found that simply letting ~ = ~ reproduces well experimental data E133.
It is worth notinglthat
side of equation
the last two terms in the right hand
(2) imply that when the permeability K is large, the re-
sistance to flow becomes effectively controlled by the ordinary viscou~ resistance
(~V2~.
in a fluid layer.
In this case the convection phenomenon is similar to that According to the Boussinesq approximation
the density was
assumed constant everywhere except in the body force term in equation where it was approximated by 0 = Qo [I - ~
(2)
VOI.
12, NO. 2
BRINKMANH~tTG~%~TINGPOROUSIAYER
151
Since the scope of the p r e s e n t study is limited to define the m a r g i n a l stability b o u n d a r i e s
for stationary convection,
the left hand sides of eqs. stability b o u n d a r i e s state equations.
(3) and
the time d e p e n d e d terms in
(4) are omitted and the m a r g i n a l
are o b t a i n e d via linear stability analysis of the steady
The t e m p e r a t u r e
wall are assumed constant.
and the species c o n c e n t r a t i o n
The notation adopted in the linear stability
analysis of the next section assumes that if dT = T L- T U > the respective
on either
temperature or c o n c e n t r a t i o n
0or dS=
S L- S U < 0
gradient is destabilizing.
Linear Stability A n a l y s i s A c c o r d i n g to standard linear stability p r o c e d u r e s we assume that all the depended variables of the p r o b l e m can be d e c o m p o s e d a perturbation
component
(T = T + @, S = S + c).
p r o b l e m are easy to o b t a i n E14 3 . The p e r t u r b a t i o n
into a mean
(static) and
The solutions to the static
Hence, they are emitted here for brevity.
q u a n t i t i e s can be w r i t t e n as
,c. ,,,)
(w.,o.c.). (w. ,z.,.
[,x.+
The resulting g o v e r n i n g equations read [14 3 -Rn 2 Q, + ~ e ~2RsC. = ,
-
_
-
[~(~-z.) - 1] W,-(D2- ~ .
(7,
Note that the above equations have been m a d e d i m e n s i o n l e s s
according to the
following definitions: x.,y.,z. =
@ @. = ~ ,
(x,y,z)/H,
The n o n d i m e n s i o n a l i z a t i o n
c w C, = ~-, w. = ~ H
(9)
of the p r o b l e m y i e l d e d five d i m e n s i o n l e s s para-
meters R, Rs, B, Le and Da.
All these p a r a m e t e r s
are d e f i n e d in the no-
menclature.
In addition, n 2 2 + n2 is the h o r i z o n t a l wave number and d = ~x y operator D = d~z, is shorthand notation for the d e r i v a t i v e w i t h respect to z,. In the p r e s e n t study we investigate b o t h the case where the u p p e r surface is free and the case where the upper surface is rigid.
Mathematically,
the b o u n d a r y conditions are expressed by the following equations: z, = 0
:
W. = DW, = Q, = C, = 0
rigid lower surface
z, = 1
:
G, = C, = 0 and W, = D2W. = 0 for free upper b o u n d a r y or W. = DW, = 0 for rigid upper b o u n d a r y
(I0)
152
B. Selimos and D. Poulikakos
Vol. 12, No. 2
To obtain the critical Rayleigh number, at which convection first sets in the porous layer, we employ the Galerkin steps are reported in E I4~.
method E 15-173.
The method yields a system of n algebraic
equations for the unknown constants A I F m I (n ,m) BR] | o ~A m ~2 [ R - R s ---J2 L- (m~)2 + ~2 Da------[ + (m~)2 + ~ 2 + CmISn)+
D I(n)+ m 3
+ BmI(n)6 + C I ( n 7)+m
The successive
E I(n~ m# j
(n) + Bm I 1
P - (n ,mY + BRN 2 l±s ~ -2 ] [ (m~)2+ D2+Da[(m~) 2 + )~ 1
DmI: n) EmI:n)] + [ (rag)2 + D2] Io(n'm) I
It is worth noting that by applying the boundary conditions
(ii)
0
(I0) for each of
the two cases of interest, the constants Bm, C m, D m, Em are evaluated and are reported in the Appendix.
The Appendix also contains the definitions
of the integrals, denoted by I.± in (ii). The system of n equations represented by expression (ii) for n = i, 2, 3, ..., yields an nxm matrix of coefficients for the unknown constants A . In the present study the approximation n = m = 6 was found m to be sufficient to provide accurate results. In order that A be nonm trivial it is required that the determinant of the matrix of coefficients for Am vanishes.
This condition yields Rcr and Ncr for prescribed values of
R , B and Da E14~s Results and Discussion The main results regarding marginal stability for rigid-free boundaries are reported in Fig. i.
Figure la shows the impact of the heat generation
B on the critical Rayleigh number, R
. The value of the Darcy number, cr Da = 0.001 is representative of the Darcian porous medium limit. The curves labeled R
= 0 were found to be in excellent agreement with the results s reported in ref. E 4 3 which dealt with the problem of the onset of convection in a heat generating porous layer in the absence of concentration gradients (the disagreement was of the order of a fraction of one percent and it was due to the fact that the curves in ref. 4 were for smaller Darcy number, Da = 0).
Two families of curves are reported:
one for destabilizing AT.
one for stabilizing AT and
According to our notation, when AT is stabilizing,
the sign of the values of R negative.
read off the graph should be changed to cr With reference to the curves corresponding to destabilizing
values of AT, increasing the internal heat generation has the effect of de-
Vol. 12, NO. 2
~4
. . . . . . . .
[
. . . . . . . .
BRINKMANHEATG~qERATINGPOROUSIAYER
i
. . . . . . . .
r
. . . . . . . .
i
153
i
. . . . . .
6T~O
!'*i
AT~,O
.-,
.......
;e
...................
;
......
10 3 R©r
n~
(a)
(b)
~
~
,
I
, ' ' <.
I
,
........
I
........
l
........
I
........
"\
)1 t D ~ . O( I1 ~ s G :
•
li (d,,t,~zJ,~
~4
........
I
10
........
'iOs
~
,
, , .....
~
. . . . . .
|(c
10~
IOs
......
~o~
10-4
~
10-1
i0-I
I
I0
Oo
(C)
(d) FIG.
a)
........
1
C r i t i c a l Rayleigh number vs. heat g e n e r a t i o n function for rigid-free boundaries, Da = 0.001 b) Da = 0.i c) Da = i00 d) The t r a n s i t i o n from D a r c y p o r o u s m e d i a to classical fluids for rigid-free b o u n d a r i e s I
........
I
........
I
.......
i
......
'
~TCO
........
r
o'1
0.~o(I).
i
.......
1~ s
[ 1~ I
........
i
........
1
L
~o
j_,,
...... lo
m
~od ~,,j
~0s
lO'1
,
I
, ......
~0- I
~o-1
I~r
Ca)
Cb) FIG.
a)
1 D*
2
C r i t i c a l R a y l e i g h number vs. heat g e n e r a t i o n function for rigid-rigid boundaries, Da = 0.001 b) The t r a n s i t i o n from Darcy p o r o u s m e d i a to c l a s s i c a l fluids for r i g i d - r i g i d boundaries
10
RI. ~
154
B. S e l i m o s a n d D. P o u l i k a k o s
creasing
the critical
of the curves
Rayleigh
indicates
value of R after w h i c h
number.
Vol.
The sharp drop in the right
that for small values instabilities
appear
of B there
is to either expand (R = -20) or reduce s s regime. When the effect of AT is stabilizing, is n e e d e d
concentration heat
source
gradients
necessary
the i m p o s e d B where tion.
to d e s t a b i l i z e increase
for thermal
AT becomes
the internal
heat g e n e r a t i o n
This fact is shown
and negative generation
to reduce
Figures stability
the impact
Da = 0.i
(Fig.
and, next to Da = i00
matrix
has a negligible
stronger
la to Fig. internal
stabilities
that the Darcy
is satisfied
in d e s c r i b i n g
in Figs.
la-lc,
the right between
that,
heat g e n e r a t i o n
[113.
on the marginal
fluids
as the p o r o u s m a t r i x becomes to bring
This p h e n o m e n o n
about makes
does not satisfy
to flow.
Another
Da shifts
porous
limit).
less dense, in-
sense p h y s i c a l l y
the no-slip
con-
fluids
by ~ in eq.
interesting
the stability
the
Passing
convective
In the limit of classical
is that increasing
to
of the case where
since the term m u l t i p l i e d
the resistance
Increas-
(highly permeable)
(classical
is required
media
however,
(2) takes
observation
boundaries
to
of increasing R ). Figure id bridges the gap cr flows and flows of c l a s s i c a l fluids for B = 0 and i00.
It is safe to say that for Da = 0(i) on the onset criterion
of c o n v e c t i o n
or greater
is negligible.
the p o r o u s
Increasing
matrix
B renders
effect
the above
more conservative.
The last two Figures
2a,b illustrate
to the case of rigid-rigid
discussion well.
of positive
heat
(the d i r e c t i o n
porous
relevant
cr of destabiliza-
is increased
representative
flow model
on the lower b o u n d a r y
this c o n d i t i o n over
ic)
for the same Rcr and R s.
if we realize dition
of the Darcy number
of
and large
= R + 4 ~ 2 was verified. cr s on R s cr"
on the flow
ic reveals
R
1 (the curves
of a n o n - D a r c i a n
(Fig.
effect
The nature
of internal
of the Darcy number
ib) r e p r e s e n t a t i v e
matrix
from Fig.
the p r o c e s s
of the
[63 R of R
The value
strength
respectively.
dominates
ib and ic show the effect
boundaries.
or d e s t a b i l i z i n g
in the limit of small
In the absence
(B = 0), the c r i t e r i o n
ing B tends
Stabilizing
in the left side of Fig.
AT's come together).
The effect
= 20) the convection s stronger internal heat
the needed
convection,
less important
side
(R
the layer.
or decrease
2
is a distinct
in the system.
of R
generation
12, No.
for the rigid-free
Hence,
investigation.
for brevity, Detailed
boundaries.
boundary
of the investigation Most of the q u a l i t a t i v e
conditions
we will p r e s e n t
results
results
holds
in this case as
here only the highlights
are reported
in ref.
E143.
of the
It was observed
Vol. 12, NO. 2
BRINEM%NH~iT~POBOt~
155
that in the small Da limit the results for the two types of boundary conditions converge to the same values. becomes felt
A s the presence of the solid walls
(increasing Da) the results for the two sets of boundary
conditions deviate
(Figures id and 2b).
Of interest is the fact that the
curves for stabilizing and destabilizing AT "come together" at considerably higher R
values in the case of rigid,rigid boundaries (compare for example, cr Fig. la to Fig. 2a). The results of the present study for rigid-rigid boundaries showed excellent agreement with the findings of ref. [18~ in the classical fluids limit with heat generation and ref. R
= 0, B = 0.
[193
in the limit
Finally, the presence of a second solid boundary
(top wall)
s
yielded an "all around" increase in R
cr
.
Nomenclature A
constants in eq.
m
(ii)
dimensionless volumetric heat generation
B
constants in equation
B m
(ii)
c
perturbation concentration
c(z)
function in eq.
C
constants in equation
m
c
(5) (ii)
fluid specific heat at constant pressure P
D
mass diffusivity of the fluid saturated porous medium
s Da D E
Darcy number, K/H 2
m m
g
constants in equation
(11)
constants in equation
(11)
acceleration of gravity
H
layer depth
I. 1 K
(n,m)
ith intergral in equation
(11)
permeability of the porous matrix
Le
Lewis number, ~/'D s
P
pressure
Q
volumetric heat generation, QH2/(AAT)
R
thermal Rayleigh number, K~8~TH
S
concentration Rayleigh number, K ~ S H 9D species concentration s
AS
species concentration difference between upper and lower surface
R s
temperature AT
temperature time
difference between upper and lower surface
156
B. Selimos and D. Poulikakos
Vol. 12, No.
velocity vector, ~(u,v,w) U
x- component of velocity vector
V
y- component of velocity vector
W
z- component of velocity vector
W(z)
function in eq.
(5)
X
horizontal cartesian coordinate
Y
horizontal cartesian coordinate
Z
vertical cartesian coordinate
Greek symbols thermal diffusivity of the fluid saturated porous medium
B
thermal coefficient of volume expansion
Y
concentration coefficient of volume expansion
n
horizontal wave number
8
perturbation temperature
@(z)
function in eq. (5)
l
thermal conductivity of porous/fluid matrix fluid viscosity effective viscosity of porous bed fluid density
P
heat capacity ratio
[~ (0Cp)f + ( i - ~ ) ( 0 C p ) s ] ~ D C p ) f
porosity of porous matrix Subscripts L
lower surface
m
incremental integer of sine series solution
n
number of equations
u
upper surface
symbols dimensionless quantity static condition References i.
Horton, C.W. and Rogers, F.T., Jr., Journal of Applied Physics, 16, 367, (1945).
2.
Lapwood, E.R., Proc. Camb. Phil. Soc., 44, 508, (1948).
Vol. 12, No. 2
~ H E A T ~ P O R ~ J S I A Y E R
157
3.
Hwang, I., Ph.D Thesis, University of Minnesota, 1971.
4.
Gasser, R.D. and Kazimi, M.S., Journal of Heat Transfer, 98, 49, (1976).
5. Schulenberg, T. and Muller, U., Intl. Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, 27, 677, (1984). 6. Nield, D.A., Water Resources Research, 4, 553, 7. Rubin, H., Water Resources Research, 2, 211,
(1968)
(1973)
8. Taunton, J.W. and Lightfoot, E.N., Physics of Fluids, 15, 748, (1972). 9. Katto, Y. and Masuoka, T., Intl. Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, iO, 297, (1967). i0. Brinkman, H.C. Applied Science Research, ~, 27, (1947). ii. Cheng, P., Advances in Heat Transfer, 14, i, (1979). 12. Lundgren, T.S., Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 51, 273,
(1972).
13. G. Neale and W. Nader, Canadian Journal of Chemical Engineering, 52, 475, (1974). 14.
Selimos, B. On Double Diffusion in a Brlnkman Heat Generating Porous Layer, M.S. Thesis, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, (1984).
15. Chandrasekhar, S., Hydrodynamic and Hydroma@netic Stability, Oxford University Press, (1961). 16. Kantorovich, L.V. and Krylov, V.I., Approximate Methods of Hi~her Analysis, John Wiley, N.Y., pp. 292-293, (1964). 17. Chung, T.J., Finite Element Analysis in Fluid Dynamics, McGraw-Hill, N.Y., (1978). 18. Sparrow, E., Goldstein, R. and Johnson, V., J. of Fluid Mechanics, 18, 513, (1964) 19. Walker, K. and Homsy, J.M., J. Heat Transfer, 99, 338,
(1977).
Appendix The coefficients B
- E , m = 1,2, ... in equation (ll) are as follws: m
m
a)
Bm = ~2~ Q 1
2
R i g i d - F r e e H o r i z o n t a l Boundaries
+ ~ ~ 2Q 1
2
b)
2
13Q ,
~3Q 1
-
2
2
1
1
Cm = Bm ~ ,
Dm = Bm ~ ,
1
2
Ri@id-Ri@id Horizontal Boundaries
Em
=
-D
m
158
B. Selimos and D. Poulikakos
Bm = Am [%IQ 3
Cm = A m
Vol. 12, No. 2
I 2Q % + ~ 2 + ~ 2 (-l)m ~cosh~ I - coshl2>]/Qs,
[X2Q3 _ % IQ ~ + % i _ % 1 (_[)m (cosh% 1 - c o s h % 2 ) ] / Q 5
Dm = A m
6
2
2
m
m
where A
=
m
-~ [[ - , ~2 [ ~ (m~) + + Da (m)2
= sinh%
Q3
1
sinh%
2
,
Q
~
+ ~
= cosh'
2] 2
1
QI
cosh%
2
= sinh%
,
Q
2
coshl
Q
i
2
= sin%
I
coshl
= -2% , + % % Q -<121 +%;)Q3 I 2 I z 4
5
Q6 = %2Q2 - % IQ I The integrals
in eq.
(ii) are defined as follows:
.i I(n)i =Io sin(n~z,) F i ( z ~ z ,
F
0
F F
= sin(m~z.), = cosh(%2z,),
7
= z,sinh(%2z,),
F
I
F
i = 0,i,
= sinh(% z,), i
F
.°.,9
2
= z, s i n ( m ~ z , ) ,
5 F
~
where
= sinh(% z.), 2 F
= z,cosh(% z,), i
6 F
9
F
3
= cosh(%iz,)
= z,sinh(llz,~ = z,cosh (~ z,) 2
Acknowledgments Financial
support provided by the University
for this work is greatly appreciated.
of Illinois Research Board
2