Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
650847 European Journal of Mechanics - B/Fluids 2006 15 Pages PDF
Abstract

The intention of the “von Kármán sodium” (VKS) experiment is to study the hydromagnetic dynamo effect in a highly turbulent and unconstrained flow. Much effort has been devoted to the optimization of the mean flow and the lateral boundary conditions in order to minimize the critical magnetic Reynolds number and hence the necessary motor power. The main focus of this paper lies on the role of “lid layers”, i.e. layers of liquid sodium between the impellers and the end walls of the cylinder. First, we study an analytical test flow to show that lid layers can have an ambivalent effect on the efficiency of the dynamo. The critical magnetic Reynolds number shows a flat minimum for a small lid layer thickness, but increases for thicker layers. For the actual VKS geometry it is shown that static lid layers yield a moderate increase of by approximately 12 per cent. A more dramatic increase by 100 till 150 per cent can occur when some rotational flow is taken into account in those layers. Possible solutions of this problem are discussed for the real dynamo facility.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes