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      Rotation shields chaotic mixing regions from no-slip walls

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          Abstract

          We report on the decay of a passive scalar in chaotic mixing protocols where the wall of the vessel is rotated, or a net drift of fluid elements near the wall is induced at each period. As a result the fluid domain is divided into a central isolated chaotic region and a peripheral regular region. Scalar patterns obtained in experiments and simulations converge to a strange eigenmode and follow an exponential decay. This contrasts with previous experiments [Gouillart et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 99, 114501 (2007)] with a chaotic region spanning the whole domain, where fixed walls constrained mixing to follow a slower algebraic decay. Using a linear analysis of the flow close to the wall, as well as numerical simulations of Lagrangian trajectories, we study the influence of the rotation velocity of the wall on the size of the chaotic region, the approach to its bounding separatrix, and the decay rate of the scalar.

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          Tracer microstructure in the large-eddy dominated regime

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            Scalar variance decay in chaotic advection and Batchelor-regime turbulence

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              Walls Inhibit Chaotic Mixing

              We report on experiments of chaotic mixing in a closed vessel, in which a highly viscous fluid is stirred by a moving rod. We analyze quantitatively how the concentration field of a low-diffusivity dye relaxes towards homogeneity, and we observe a slow algebraic decay of the inhomogeneity, at odds with the exponential decay predicted by most previous studies. Visual observations reveal the dominant role of the vessel wall, which strongly influences the concentration field in the entire domain and causes the anomalous scaling. A simplified 1D model supports our experimental results. Quantitative analysis of the concentration pattern leads to scalings for the distributions and the variance of the concentration field consistent with experimental and numerical results.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                21 September 2009
                Article
                10.1103/PhysRevLett.104.204502
                0909.3888
                8bc72c0b-6a15-4cb4-84e1-ddc272ec09da

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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                Phys. Rev. Lett. 104, 204502 (2010)
                4 pages, 12 figures, RevTeX 4 style
                cond-mat.soft

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