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91探花
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Andrew Wells

Associate Professor of Physical Climate Science

Research theme

  • Climate physics

Sub department

  • Atmospheric, Oceanic and Planetary Physics

Research groups

  • Ice and Fluid Dynamics
Andrew.Wells@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)82425
Robert Hooke Building, room F60
  • About
  • Publications

Melting and dissolving of a vertical solid surface with laminar compositional convection

JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS 687 (2011) 118-140

Authors:

Andrew J Wells, M Grae Worster

Optimal and hysteretic fluxes in alloy solidification: Variational principles and chimney spacing

(2010)

Authors:

Andrew J Wells, JS Wettlaufer, Steven A Orszag

Maximal Potential Energy Transport: A Variational Principle for Solidification Problems

PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS 105:25 (2010) ARTN 254502

Authors:

AJ Wells, JS Wettlaufer, SA Orszag

Variations in Ocean Surface Temperature due to Near-Surface Flow: Straining the Cool Skin Layer

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY 39:11 (2009) 2685-2710

Authors:

Andrew J Wells, Claudia Cenedese, J Thomas Farrar, Christopher J Zappa

A geophysical-scale model of vertical natural convection boundary layers

Journal of Fluid Mechanics 609 (2008) 111-137

Authors:

AJ Wells, MG Worster

Abstract:

A model is developed for turbulent natural convection in boundary layers formed next to isothermal vertical surfaces. A scaling analysis shows that the flow can be described by plume equations for an outer turbulent region coupled to a resolved near-wall laminar flow. On the laboratory scale, the inner layer is dominated by its own buoyancy and the Nusselt number scales as the one-third power of the Rayleigh number (Nu 鈭 Raz1/3). This gives a constant heat flux, consistent with previous experimental and theoretical studies. On larger geophysical scales the buoyancy is strongest in the outer layer and the laminar layer is driven by the shear imposed on it. The predicted heat transfer correlation then has the Nusselt number proportional to the one-half power of Rayleigh number (Nu 鈭 Raz1/2) so that a larger heat flux is predicted than might be expected from an extrapolation of laboratory-scale results. The criteria for transitions between flow regimes are consistent with a hierarchy of instabilities of the near-wall laminar flow, with a buoyancy-driven instability operating on the laboratory scale and a shear-driven instability operating on geophysical scales. 漏 2008 Cambridge University Press.

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