Propagating fronts in fluids with solutal feedback

S. Mukherjee and M. R. Paul
Phys. Rev. E 101, 032214 – Published 25 March 2020

Abstract

We numerically study the propagation of reacting fronts in a shallow and horizontal layer of fluid with solutal feedback and in the presence of a thermally driven flow field of counterrotating convection rolls. We solve the Boussinesq equations along with a reaction-convection-diffusion equation for the concentration field where the products of the nonlinear autocatalytic reaction are less dense than the reactants. For small values of the solutal Rayleigh number the characteristic fluid velocity scales linearly, and the front velocity and mixing length scale quadratically, with increasing solutal Rayleigh number. For small solutal Rayleigh numbers the front geometry is described by a curve that is nearly antisymmetric about the horizontal midplane. For large values of the solutal Rayleigh number the characteristic fluid velocity, the front velocity, and the mixing length exhibit square-root scaling and the front shape collapses onto an asymmetric self-similar curve. In the presence of counterrotating convection rolls, the mixing length decreases while the front velocity increases. The complexity of the front geometry increases when both the solutal and convective contributions are significant and the dynamics can exhibit chemical oscillations in time for certain parameter values. Last, we discuss the spatiotemporal features of the complex fronts that form over a range of solutal and thermal driving.

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  • Received 9 December 2019
  • Accepted 28 February 2020
  • Corrected 3 April 2020

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.101.032214

©2020 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Nonlinear DynamicsFluid Dynamics

Corrections

3 April 2020

Correction: An error in an inline equation giving the reaction timescale in Sec. 2 has been fixed.

Authors & Affiliations

S. Mukherjee

  • Department of Biomedical Engineering and Mechanics, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia 24061, USA

M. R. Paul*

  • Department of Mechanical Engineering, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia 24061, USA

  • *Corresponding author: mrp@vt.edu

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Issue

Vol. 101, Iss. 3 — March 2020

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