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Bénard cells

 

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Bénard cells



 
 
Bénard cells are convection cell
Convection cell

A convection cell is a phenomenon of fluid dynamics that occurs in situations where there are temperature differences within a body of liquid or gas....
s that appear spontaneously in a liquid layer when heat is applied from below. They can be obtained using a simple experiment first conducted by Henri Bénard
Henri Bénard

Henri B?nard, , French physicist, best known for his research on convection in liquids that now carries his name, Benard convection.He defended his PhD thesis at the College de France on March 15, 1901 entitled "Les Tourbillons cellulaires dans une nappe liquide propageant de la chaleur par convection en r?gime permanent"....
, a French physicist, in 1900. The experiment illustrates the theory of dissipative system
Dissipative system

A dissipative system is a thermodynamically open system which is operating far from thermodynamic equilibrium in an environment with which it exchanges energy and matter....
s.

The experimental set-up uses a layer of liquid, e.g. water, between two parallel planes. The height of the layer is small compared to the horizontal dimension.

irst, the temperature of the bottom plane is the same as the top plane.






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Bénard cells are convection cell
Convection cell

A convection cell is a phenomenon of fluid dynamics that occurs in situations where there are temperature differences within a body of liquid or gas....
s that appear spontaneously in a liquid layer when heat is applied from below. They can be obtained using a simple experiment first conducted by Henri Bénard
Henri Bénard

Henri B?nard, , French physicist, best known for his research on convection in liquids that now carries his name, Benard convection.He defended his PhD thesis at the College de France on March 15, 1901 entitled "Les Tourbillons cellulaires dans une nappe liquide propageant de la chaleur par convection en r?gime permanent"....
, a French physicist, in 1900. The experiment illustrates the theory of dissipative system
Dissipative system

A dissipative system is a thermodynamically open system which is operating far from thermodynamic equilibrium in an environment with which it exchanges energy and matter....
s.

The experimental set-up uses a layer of liquid, e.g. water, between two parallel planes. The height of the layer is small compared to the horizontal dimension.

Equilibrium and thermal conduction

At first, the temperature of the bottom plane is the same as the top plane. The liquid will then tend towards an equilibrium
Thermodynamic equilibrium

In thermodynamics, a thermodynamics#Thermodynamic system is said to be in thermodynamic equilibrium when it is in thermal equilibrium, mechanical equilibrium, and chemical equilibrium....
, where its temperature is the same as the one outside. Once there, the liquid is perfectly uniform: an observer in it would see the same environment in any spot, and in any direction. This equilibrium is also asymptotically stable
Asymptotic stability

In control theory, a continuous LTI system theory is exponentially stable if and only if the system has eigenvalues with strictly negative real parts....
: after a local, temporary perturbation of the outside temperature, it will go back to its uniform state, in line with the second law of thermodynamics
Second law of thermodynamics

The second law of thermodynamics is an expression of the universal law of increasing entropy, stating that the entropy of an isolated system which is not in Thermodynamic equilibrium will tend to increase over time, approaching a maximum value at equilibrium....
.

Then, the temperature of the bottom plane is increased slightly: a permanent flow of energy will occur through the liquid. The system will begin to have a structure of thermal conductivity
Thermal conductivity

In physics, thermal conductivity, , is the List of materials properties of a material that indicates its ability to conduct heat. It appears primarily in Heat conduction#Fourier's law for heat conduction....
: the temperature, and the density and pressure with it, will vary linearly between the bottom and top plane. This system is modelled very well in Statistical mechanics
Statistical mechanics

Statistical mechanics is the application of probability theory, which includes Mathematics tools for dealing with large populations, to the field of mechanics, which is concerned with the motion of particles or objects when subjected to a force....
.

Far from equilibrium: convection and turbulence

If we progressively increase the temperature of the bottom plane, there will be a temperature at which something dramatic happens in the liquid: convection cells will appear. The microscopic random movement spontaneously became ordered on a macroscopic level, with a characteristic correlation length. The rotation of the cells is stable and will alternate from clock-wise to counter-clockwise as we move along horizontally: there is a spontaneous symmetry breaking
Spontaneous symmetry breaking

In physics, spontaneous symmetry breaking occurs when a system that is symmetry in physics with respect to some symmetry group goes into a vacuum state that is not symmetric....
.

Bénard cells are metastable
Metastability

Metastability is a general scientific concept which describes states of delicate equilibrium. A system is in a metastable state when it is in equilibrium but is susceptible to fall into lower-energy states with only slight interaction....
. This means that a small perturbation will not be able to change the rotation of the cells, but a larger one could affect the rotation; they exhibit a form of hysteresis
Hysteresis

A system with hysteresis can be summarized as a system that may be in any number of states, independent of the inputs to the system. To be exact, a system with hysteresis exhibits path-dependence, or "rate-independent memory"....
.

Moreover, the deterministic law at the microscopic level produces a non-deterministic arrangement of the cells: if you reproduce the experiment many times, a particular position in the experiment will be in a clockwise cell in some cases, and a counter-clockwise cell in others. Microscopic perturbations of the initial conditions are enough to produce a macroscopic effect: this is an example of the Butterfly effect
Butterfly effect

The butterfly effect is a phrase that encapsulates the more technical notion of sensitive dependence on initial conditions in chaos theory....
 from Chaos theory
Chaos theory

In mathematics, chaos theory describes the behavior of certain dynamical system s ? that is, systems whose states evolve with time ? that may exhibit dynamics that are highly sensitive to initial conditions ....
.

The temperature at which convection appears is thus a bifurcation point, hence the system can be analyzed via bifurcation diagram
Bifurcation diagram

In mathematics, particularly in dynamical systems, a bifurcation diagram shows the possible long-term values of a system as a function of a Bifurcation theory in the system....
s. The bifurcation temperature depends on the viscosity and thermal conductivity of the liquid, and on the physical dimensions of the experiment.

If the temperature of the bottom plane was to be further increased, the structure would become more complex in space and time; the turbulent flow would become chaotic
Chaos theory

In mathematics, chaos theory describes the behavior of certain dynamical system s ? that is, systems whose states evolve with time ? that may exhibit dynamics that are highly sensitive to initial conditions ....
.

Rayleigh-Bénard and Bénard-Marangoni convection

In the case of two plates between which a thin liquid layer is placed, only buoyancy is responsible for the appearance of convection cells. This type of convection is called Rayleigh-Bénard convection. The initial movement is the upwelling of warmer liquid from the heated bottom layer.

In case of a free liquid surface in contact with air also surface tension
Surface tension

Surface tension is an attractive property of the surface of a liquid. It is what causes the surface portion of liquid to be attracted to another surface, such as that of another portion of liquid ....
 effects will play a role, besides buoyancy. It is known that liquids flow from places of lower surface tension to places of higher surface tension. This is called the Marangoni effect
Marangoni effect

The Marangoni Effect is the mass transfer on, or in, a liquid layer due to surface tension differences.The most familiar example is in soap films: the Marangoni effect stabilizes soap films....
. When applying heat from below, the temperature at the top layer will show temperature fluctuations. With increasing temperature, surface tension decreases. Thus a lateral flow of liquid at the surface will take place, from warmer areas to cooler areas. In order to preserve a horizontal (or nearly horizontal) liquid surface, liquid from the cooler places on the surface have to go down into the liquid. Thus the driving force of the convection cells is the downwelling of liquid.

A very detailed mathematical treatment of this from the point of view of the Navier-Stokes equations and the equations of Thermodynamics can be found in the first third of Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar's
Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar

Padma Vibhushan Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar, Fellow of the Royal Society , English ) was an Non-resident Indian and Person of Indian Origin born United States astrophysicist....
 , originally published in the early 1960s by Oxford, and republished by Dover in 1981.

Shape

Convective Bénard cells tend to approximate regular right hexagonal prisms, particularly in the absence of turbulence, although certain experimental conditions can result in the formation of regular right square prisms or spirals.

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