Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1792465 | Journal of Crystal Growth | 2011 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
The sensitivity of a flow that is driven by a travelling magnetic field (TMF) with respect to a shift between the axes of the cylindrical liquid metal column and of the TMF was studied both experimentally and by numerical simulation. In the physical modelling, the TMF is generated by six equidistantly spaced cylindrical coils loaded with ac current having a phase shift of 60â between them, respectively. Ultrasound Doppler velocimetry was used to acquire vertical sections of the vertical velocity component along the beam axis in the centre and at various azimuthal positions for a fixed radial coordinate. The measurements are compared to the according flow data from large eddy simulations. These computations were based on the usual approximations to simplify the magnetohydrodynamical equations, which are low-frequency and low induction, and on an analytical expression for the Lorentz force considering the shift between the fluid volume and the field. It is shown that even a small shift between the axes may result in a distinct three-dimensional constituent of the flow structure, and thus changing completely the usually assumed axisymmetric torus-type flow.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Physics and Astronomy
Condensed Matter Physics
Authors
A. Cramer, J. Pal, K. Koal, S. Tschisgale, J. Stiller, G. Gerbeth,