Schneider Flow
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Schneider flow describes the axisymmetric outer flow induced by a laminar or turbulent jet having a large jet
Reynolds number In fluid mechanics, the Reynolds number () is a dimensionless quantity that helps predict fluid flow patterns in different situations by measuring the ratio between inertial and viscous forces. At low Reynolds numbers, flows tend to be domi ...
or by a laminar plume with a large Grashof number, in the case where the fluid domain is bounded by a wall. When the jet Reynolds number or the plume Grashof number is large, the full flow field constitutes two regions of different extent: a thin boundary-layer flow that may identified as the jet or as the plume and a slowly moving fluid in the large outer region encompassing the jet or the plume. The Schneider flow describing the latter motion is an exact solution of the Navier-Stokes equations, discovered by Wilhelm Schneider in 1981. The solution was discovered also by A. A. Golubinskii and V. V. Sychev in 1979, however, was never applied to flows entrained by jets. The solution is an extension of Taylor's potential flow solutionTaylor, G. (1958). Flow induced by jets. Journal of the Aerospace Sciences, 25(7), 464–465. to arbitrary
Reynolds number In fluid mechanics, the Reynolds number () is a dimensionless quantity that helps predict fluid flow patterns in different situations by measuring the ratio between inertial and viscous forces. At low Reynolds numbers, flows tend to be domi ...
.


Mathematical description

For laminar or turbulent jets and for laminar plumes, the volumetric entertainment rate per unit axial length is constant as can be seen from the solution of Schlichting jet and Yih plume. Thus, the jet or plume can be considered as a line sink that drives the motion in the outer region, as was first done by
G. I. Taylor Sir Geoffrey Ingram Taylor OM FRS FRSE (7 March 1886 – 27 June 1975) was a British physicist and mathematician, and a major figure in fluid dynamics and wave theory. His biographer and one-time student, George Batchelor, described him as ...
. Prior to Schneider, it was assumed that this outer fluid motion is also a large Reynolds number flow, hence the outer fluid motion is assumed to be a potential flow solution, which was solved by
G. I. Taylor Sir Geoffrey Ingram Taylor OM FRS FRSE (7 March 1886 – 27 June 1975) was a British physicist and mathematician, and a major figure in fluid dynamics and wave theory. His biographer and one-time student, George Batchelor, described him as ...
in 1958. For turbulent plume, the entrainment is not constant, nevertheless, the outer fluid is still governed by Taylors solution. Though Taylor's solution is still true for turbulent jet, for laminar jet or laminar plume, the effective Reynolds number for outer fluid is found to be of order unity since the entertainment by the sink in these cases is such that the flow is not inviscid. In this case, full Navier-Stokes equations has to be solved for the outer fluid motion and at the same time, since the fluid is bounded from the bottom by a solid wall, the solution has to satisfy the non-slip condition. Schneider obtained a self-similar solution for this outer fluid motion, which naturally reduced to Taylor's potential flow solution as the entrainment rate by the line sink is increased. Suppose a conical wall of semi-angle \alpha with polar axis along the cone-axis and assume the vertex of the solid cone sits at the origin of the spherical coordinates (r,\theta,\phi) extending along the negative axis. Now, put the line sink along the positive side of the polar axis. Set this way, \alpha=\pi/2 represents the common case of flat wall with jet or plume emerging from the origin. The case \alpha=\pi corresponds to jet/plume issuing from a thin injector. The flow is axisymmetric with zero azimuthal motion, i.e., the velocity components are (v_r,v_\theta,0). The usual technique to study the flow is to introduce the
Stokes stream function In fluid dynamics, the Stokes stream function is used to describe the streamlines and flow velocity in a three-dimensional incompressible flow with axisymmetry. A surface with a constant value of the Stokes stream function encloses a streamtube, ...
\psi such that :v_r = \frac\frac, \quad v_\theta = - \frac\frac. Introducing \xi =\cos\theta as the replacement for \theta and introducing the self-similar form \psi = K\nu r f(\xi) into the axisymmetric Navier-Stokes equations, we obtainCoenen, W., Rajamanickam, P., Weiss, A. D., Sánchez, A. L., & Williams, F. A. (2019). Swirling flow induced by jets and plumes. Acta Mechanica, 230(6), 2221-2231. :K^ 1-\xi^2)f' - 4\xi f- ff - 3f'f'' = 0. where the constant K is such that the volumetric entrainment rate per unit axial length is equal to 2\pi K\nu. For laminar jet, K=4 and for laminar plume, it depends on the
Prandtl number The Prandtl number (Pr) or Prandtl group is a dimensionless number, named after the German physicist Ludwig Prandtl, defined as the ratio of momentum diffusivity to thermal diffusivity. The Prandtl number is given as: : \mathrm = \frac = \frac ...
Pr, for example with Pr=1, we have K=6 and with Pr=2, we have K=4. For turbulent jet, this constant is the order of the jet Reynolds number, which is a large number. The above equation can easily be reduced to a
Riccati equation In mathematics, a Riccati equation in the narrowest sense is any first-order ordinary differential equation that is quadratic in the unknown function. In other words, it is an equation of the form : y'(x) = q_0(x) + q_1(x) \, y(x) + q_2(x) \, y^2(x ...
by integrating thrice, a procedure that is same as in the Landau–Squire jet (main difference between Landau-Squire jet and the current problem are the boundary conditions). The boundary conditions on the conical wall \xi=\xi_w=\cos\alpha become :f(\xi_w)=f'(\xi_w)=0 and along the line sink \xi=1, we have :f(1)=1, \quad \lim_ (1-\xi)^ f''\rightarrow 0. The problem has been solved numerically from here.


Taylor's potential flow

For turbulent jet, K\gg 1, the linear terms in the equation can be neglected everywhere except near a small boundary layer along the wall. Then neglecting the non-slip conditions at the wall, the solution is given by :f= \frac. In the case of axisymmetric turbulent plumes where the entrainment rate per unit axial length of the plume increases like r^, Taylor's solution is given by \psi = C B^ r^g(\xi) where C is a constant, B is the specific bouyancy flux and :g=\frac \sqrt\left fracP_^1(\xi)-P_^1(-\xi)\right/math> in which P_^1 denotes the associated Legendre function of the first kind with degree 2/3 and order 1.


Other considerations

The exact solution of the Navier-Stokes solutions was verified experimentally by Zauner in 1985. Further analysisSchneider, W. (1985). Decay of momentum flux in submerged jets. Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 154, 91–110. showed that the axial momentum flux decays slowly along the axis unlike the Schlichting jet solution and it is found that the Schneider flow becomes invalid when distance from the origin increases to a distance of the order exponential of square of the jet Reynolds number, thus the domain of validity of Schneider solution increases with increasing jet Reynolds number.


Presence of swirl

The presence of swirling motion, i.e., v_\phi\neq 0 is shown not to influence the axial motion given by \psi=K\nu r f(\xi) provided K\sim O(1). If K is very large, the presence of swirl completely alters the motion on the axial plane. For K\sim O(1), the azimuthal solution can be solved in terms of the circulation 2\pi \Gamma, where \Gamma=r\sin\theta v_\phi. The solution can be described in terms of the self-similar solution of the second kind, \Gamma=Ar^\lambda \Lambda(\xi), where A is an unknown constant and \lambda is an eigenvalue. The function \Lambda(\xi) satisfies :K^ 1-\xi^2)\Lambda''+\lambda(\lambda-1)\Lambdaf\Lambda'+\lambda f'\Lambda =0 subjected to the boundary conditions \Lambda(\xi_w)=0 and (1-\xi)^\Lambda'\rightarrow 0 as \xi\rightarrow 1.


See also

* Landau–Squire jet * Schlichting jet


References

{{reflist, 30em Flow regimes Fluid dynamics