Taylor Dispersion
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Taylor dispersion or Taylor diffusion is an effect in
fluid mechanics Fluid mechanics is the branch of physics concerned with the mechanics of fluids ( liquids, gases, and plasmas) and the forces on them. It has applications in a wide range of disciplines, including mechanical, aerospace, civil, chemical and bio ...
in which a
shear flow The term shear flow is used in solid mechanics as well as in fluid dynamics. The expression ''shear flow'' is used to indicate: * a shear stress over a distance in a thin-walled structure (in solid mechanics);Higdon, Ohlsen, Stiles and Weese (1960) ...
can increase the effective
diffusivity Diffusivity is a rate of diffusion, a measure of the rate at which particles or heat or fluids can spread. It is measured differently for different mediums. Diffusivity may refer to: *Thermal diffusivity, diffusivity of heat *Diffusivity of mass: ...
of a species. Essentially, the shear acts to smear out the concentration distribution in the direction of the flow, enhancing the rate at which it spreads in that direction. The effect is named after the British fluid dynamicist
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 ...
, who described the shear-induced dispersion for large Peclet numbers. The analysis was later generalized by
Rutherford Aris Rutherford "Gus" Aris (September 15, 1929 – November 2, 2005) was a chemical engineer, control theorist, applied mathematician, and a Regents Professor Emeritus of Chemical Engineering at the University of Minnesota (1958–2005). Early ...
for arbitrary values of the Peclet number. The dispersion process is sometimes also referred to as the Taylor-Aris dispersion. The canonical example is that of a simple diffusing species in uniform
Poiseuille flow The poiseuille (symbol Pl) has been proposed as a derived SI unit of dynamic viscosity, named after the French physicist Jean Léonard Marie Poiseuille (1797–1869). In practice the unit has never been widely accepted and most international s ...
through a uniform circular pipe with no-flux boundary conditions.


Description

We use ''z'' as an axial coordinate and ''r'' as the radial coordinate, and assume axisymmetry. The pipe has radius ''a'', and the fluid velocity is: : \boldsymbol = w\hat = w_0 (1-r^2/a^2) \hat The
concentration In chemistry, concentration is the abundance of a constituent divided by the total volume of a mixture. Several types of mathematical description can be distinguished: '' mass concentration'', ''molar concentration'', ''number concentration'', an ...
of the diffusing species is denoted ''c'' and its
diffusivity Diffusivity is a rate of diffusion, a measure of the rate at which particles or heat or fluids can spread. It is measured differently for different mediums. Diffusivity may refer to: *Thermal diffusivity, diffusivity of heat *Diffusivity of mass: ...
is ''D''. The concentration is assumed to be governed by the linear advection–diffusion equation: : \frac + \boldsymbol \cdot \boldsymbol c = D \nabla^2 c The concentration and velocity are written as the sum of a cross-sectional average (indicated by an overbar) and a deviation (indicated by a prime), thus: : w(r) = \bar + w'(r) : c(r,z) = \bar(z) + c'(r,z) Under some assumptions (see below), it is possible to derive an equation just involving the average quantities: : \frac + \bar \frac = D \left( 1 + \frac \right) \frac Observe how the effective diffusivity multiplying the derivative on the right hand side is greater than the original value of diffusion coefficient, D. The effective diffusivity is often written as: : D_ = D \left( 1 + \frac \right)\, , where \mathit=a\bar/D is the
Péclet number In continuum mechanics, the Péclet number (, after Jean Claude Eugène Péclet) is a class of dimensionless numbers relevant in the study of transport phenomena in a continuum. It is defined to be the ratio of the rate of advection of a physical ...
, based on the channel radius a. The interesting result is that for large values of the Péclet number, the effective diffusivity is inversely proportional to the molecular diffusivity. The effect of Taylor dispersion is therefore more pronounced at higher Péclet numbers. In a frame moving with the mean velocity, i.e., by introducing \xi=z-\bar w t, the dispersion process becomes a purely diffusion process, : \frac = D_\frac with diffusivity given by the effective diffusivity. The assumption is that c' \ll \bar for given z, which is the case if the length scale in the z direction is long enough to smooth the gradient in the r direction. This can be translated into the requirement that the length scale L in the z direction satisfies: : L \gg \frac \bar w = a\mathit. Dispersion is also a function of channel geometry. An interesting phenomenon for example is that the dispersion of a flow between two infinite flat plates and a rectangular channel, which is infinitely thin, differs approximately 8.75 times. Here the very small side walls of the rectangular channel have an enormous influence on the dispersion. While the exact formula will not hold in more general circumstances, the mechanism still applies, and the effect is stronger at higher Péclet numbers. Taylor dispersion is of particular relevance for flows in
porous media A porous medium or a porous material is a material containing pores (voids). The skeletal portion of the material is often called the "matrix" or "frame". The pores are typically filled with a fluid (liquid or gas). The skeletal material is usua ...
modelled by
Darcy's law Darcy's law is an equation that describes the flow of a fluid through a porous medium. The law was formulated by Henry Darcy based on results of experiments on the flow of water through beds of sand, forming the basis of hydrogeology, a branch of e ...
.


Derivation

One may derive the Taylor equation using method of averages, first introduced by Aris. The result can also be derived from large-time asymptotics. In the dimensional coordinate system (x',r',\theta), consider the fully-developed Poiseuille flow u=2 U -(r'/a)^2/math> flowing inside a pipe of radius a, where U is the average velocity of the fluid. A species of concentration c with some arbitrary distribution is to be released at somewhere inside the pipe at time t'=0. As long as this initial distribution is compact, for instance the species/solute is not releases everywhere with finite concentration level, the species will be convected along the pipe with the mean velocity U. In a frame moving with the mean velocity and scaled with following non-dimensional scales :t=\frac,\quad x=\frac, \quad r=\frac, \quad Pe = \frac where a^2/D is the time required for the species to diffuse in the radial direction, D is the diffusion coefficient of the species and Pe is the Peclet number, the governing equations are given by :\frac+ Pe(1-2r^2)\frac =\frac + \frac\frac\left(r\frac\right). Thus in this moving frame, at times t\sim 1 (in dimensional variables, t'\sim a^2/D), the species will diffuse radially. It is clear then that when t\gg 1 (in dimensional variables, t'\gg a^2/D), the concentration is expected to become uniform across the pipe and start to diffuse in the x direction. Taylor dispersion explains the diffusion process for large t. Suppose t\sim 1/\epsilon \gg 1, where \epsilon \ll 1 is a small number. Then at these times, the concentration would spread to an axial extent x\sim \sqrt t\sim \sqrt\gg 1. To quantify large-time behavior, the following rescalingsLiñán, A., Rajamanickam, P., Weiss, A. D., & Sánchez, A. L. (2020). Taylor-diffusion-controlled combustion in ducts. Combustion Theory and Modelling, 24(6), 1054-1069. :\tau = \epsilon t, \quad \xi = \sqrt\epsilon x can be introduced. The equation then becomes :\epsilon\frac+ \sqrt\epsilon Pe(1-2r^2)\frac =\epsilon \frac + \frac\frac\left(r\frac\right). If pipe walls do not absorb or react with the species, then the boundary condition \partial c/\partial r=0 must be satisfied at r=1. Due to symmetry, \partial c/\partial r=0 at r=0. Since \epsilon \ll 1, the solution can be expanded in an asymptotic series, c=c_0 + \sqrt\epsilon c_1 +\epsilon c_2 + \cdots Substituting this series into the governing equation and collecting terms of different orders will lead to series of equations. At leading order, the equation obtained is : \frac\frac\left(r\frac\right)=0. Integrating this equation with boundary conditions defined before, one finds c_0=c_0(\xi,\tau). At this order, c_0 is still an unknown function. This fact that c_0 is independent of r is an expected result since as already said, at times t'\gg a^2/D, the radial diffusion will dominate first and make the concentration uniform across the pipe. Terms of order \sqrt\epsilon leads to the equation : \frac\frac\left(r\frac\right)=Pe (1-2r^2)\frac. Integrating this equation with respect to r using the boundary conditions leads to :c_1(\xi,r,\tau) = c_(\xi,\tau) + \frac(2r^2-r^4)\frac where c_ is the value of c_1 at r=0, an unknown function at this order. Terms of order \epsilon leads to the equation : \frac\frac\left(r\frac\right)=Pe (1-2r^2)\frac + \frac - \frac. This equation can also be integrated with respect to r, but what is required is the solvability condition of the above equation. The solvability condition is obtained by multiplying the above equation by 2r dr and integrating the whole equation from r=0 to r=1. This is also the same as averaging the above equation over the radial direction. Using the boundary conditions and results obtained in the previous two orders, the solvability condition leads (going back to (x,r,t) variables) to :\frac =\left(1+\frac\right) \frac. This is the required diffusion equation. Going back to the laboratory frame and dimensional variables, the equation becomes :\frac + U \frac =D\left(1+\frac\right) \frac.


References


Other sources

* Aris, R. (1956) , ''Proc. Roy. Soc.'' A., 235, 67–77. * Frankel, I. & Brenner, H. (1989) , ''J. Fluid Mech.'', 204, 97–119. * Taylor, G. I. (1953) , ''Proc. Roy. Soc.'' A., 219, 186–203. * Taylor, G. I. (1954) , ''Proc. Roy. Soc.'' A, 223, 446–468. * Taylor, G. I. (1954) , ''Proc. Roy. Soc.'' A., 225, 473–477. * Brenner, H. (1980) {{doi-inline, 10.1098/rsta.1980.0205, Dispersion resulting from flow through spatially periodic porous media, ''Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. Lon.'' A, 297, 81. * Mestel. J
Taylor dispersion — shear augmented diffusion
''Lecture Handout for Course M4A33'', Imperial College. Fluid mechanics Fluid dynamics