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On the meaning of mixing efficiency for buoyancy-driven mixing in stratified turbulent flows


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Authors

Davies Wykes, MS 
Hughes, GO 
Dalziel, SB 

Abstract

jats:pThe concept of a mixing efficiency is widely used to relate the amount of irreversible diabatic mixing in a stratified flow to the amount of energy available to support mixing. This common measure of mixing in a flow is based on the change in the background potential energy, which is the minimum gravitational potential energy of the fluid that can be achieved by an adiabatic rearrangement of the instantaneous density field. However, this paper highlights examples of mixing that is primarily ‘buoyancy-driven’ (i.e. energy is released to the flow predominantly from a source of available potential energy) to demonstrate that the mixing efficiency depends not only on the specific characteristics of the turbulence in the region of the flow that is mixing, but also on the density profile in regions remote from where mixing physically occurs. We show that this behaviour is due to the irreversible and direct conversion of available potential energy into background potential energy in those remote regions (a mechanism not previously described). This process (here termed ‘relabelling’) occurs without requiring either a local flow or local mixing, or any other process that affects the internal energy of that fluid. Relabelling is caused by initially available potential energy, associated with identifiable parcels of fluid, becoming dynamically inaccessible to the flow due to mixing elsewhere. These results have wider relevance to characterising mixing in stratified turbulent flows, including those involving an external supply of kinetic energy.</jats:p>

Description

Keywords

stratified flows, turbulent mixing

Journal Title

Journal of Fluid Mechanics

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0022-1120
1469-7645

Volume Title

781

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Sponsorship
G.O.H. was supported by Australian Research Council Future Fellowship FT100100869 and was hosted by DAMTP during this work. M.S.D.W. was funded by EPSRC (grant number EP/P505445/1) and an AWE CASE award (AWE contract number 30174006).