Linear stability and weak nonlinear theories are used to investigate
analytically the
Coriolis effect on three-dimensional gravity-driven convection in a rotating
porous
layer heated from below. Major differences as well as similarities with
the
corresponding problem in pure fluids (non-porous domains) are particularly
highlighted. As such, it is found that, in contrast to the problem in pure
fluids,
overstable convection in porous media is not limited to a particular domain
of Prandtl
number values (in pure fluids the necessary condition is
Pr<1). Moreover, it is also
established that in the porous-media problem the critical wavenumber in
the plane
containing the streamlines for stationary convection is not identical to
the critical
wavenumber associated with convection without rotation, and is therefore
not
independent of rotation, a result which is quite distinct from the corresponding
pure-fluids problem. Nevertheless it is evident that in porous media, just
as in the case of
pure fluids subject to rotation and heated from below, the viscosity at
high rotation
rates has a destabilizing effect on the onset of stationary convection,
i.e. the higher the
viscosity the less stable the fluid. Finite-amplitude results obtained
by using a weak
nonlinear analysis provide differential equations for the amplitude, corresponding
to
both stationary and overstable convection. These amplitude equations permit
one to
identify from the post-transient conditions that the fluid is subject to
a pitchfork
bifurcation in the stationary convection case and to a Hopf bifurcation
associated with
the overstable convection. Heat transfer results were evaluated from the
amplitude
solution and are presented in terms of Nusselt number for both stationary
and
overstable convection. They show that rotation has in general a retarding
effect on
convective heat transfer, except for a narrow region of small values of
the parameter
containing the Prandtl number where rotation enhances the heat transfer
associated
with overstable convection.
The heat conduction mechanism in nanofluid suspensions is derived for transient processes attempting to explain experimental results, which reveal an impressive heat transfer enhancement. In particular, the effect of the surface-area-to-volume ratio (specific area) of the suspended nanoparticles on the heat transfer mechanism is explicitly accounted for, and reveals its contribution to the specific solution and results. The present analysis might provide an explanation that settles an apparent conflict between the recent experimental results in nanofluid suspensions and classical theories for estimating the effective thermal conductivity of suspensions that go back more than one century (Maxwell, J.C., 1891, Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism). Nevertheless, other possible explanations have to be accounted for and investigated in more detail prior to reaching a final conclusion on the former explanation.
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