Scaling for turbulent viscosity of buoyant plumes in stratified fluids : PIV measurement with implications for submarine hydrothermal plume turbulence
Scaling for turbulent viscosity of buoyant plumes in stratified fluids : PIV measurement with implications for submarine hydrothermal plume turbulence
Date
2017-10-07
Authors
Zhang, Wei
He, Zhiguo
Jiang, Houshuo
He, Zhiguo
Jiang, Houshuo
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Location
DOI
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Keywords
Hydrothermal plume turbulence
‘Plume-cap’ entrainment
Turbulent viscosity
Time-resolved particle image velocimetry
‘Plume-cap’ entrainment
Turbulent viscosity
Time-resolved particle image velocimetry
Abstract
Time-resolved particle image velocimetry (PIV) has been used to measure instantaneous twodimensional
velocity vector fields of laboratory-generated turbulent buoyant plumes in linearly
stratified saltwater over extended periods of time. From PIV-measured time-series flow data,
characteristics of plume mean flow and turbulence have been quantified. To be specific,
maximum plume penetration scaling and entrainment coefficient determined from the mean flow
agree well with the theory based on the entrainment hypothesis for buoyant plumes in stratified
fluids. Besides the well-known persistent entrainment along the plume stem (i.e., the ‘plumestem’
entrainment), the mean plume velocity field shows persistent entrainment along the outer
edge of the plume cap (i.e., the ‘plume-cap’ entrainment), thereby confirming predictions from
previous numerical simulation studies. To our knowledge, the present PIV investigation provides
the first measured flow field data in the plume cap region. As to measured plume turbulence,
both the turbulent kinetic energy field and the turbulence dissipation rate field attain their
maximum close to the source, while the turbulent viscosity field reaches its maximum within the
plume cap region; the results also show that maximum turbulent viscosity scales as νt,max = 0.030
(B/N)1/2, where B is source buoyancy flux and N is ambient buoyancy frequency. These PIV data
combined with previously published numerical simulation results have implications for
understanding the roles of hydrothermal plume turbulence, i.e. plume turbulence within the cap
region causes the ‘plume-cap’ entrainment that plays an equally important role as the ‘plume-stem’
entrainment in supplying the final volume flux at the plume spreading level.
Description
© The Author(s), 2017. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here under a nonexclusive, irrevocable, paid-up, worldwide license granted to WHOI. It is made available for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers 129 (2017): 89-98, doi:10.1016/j.dsr.2017.10.006.