2025 : 4 : 22

Mohammad Saeid Aghighi

Academic rank: Assistant Professor
ORCID:
Education: PhD.
ScopusId: 55539706200
HIndex:
Faculty: Faculty of Engineering
Address:
Phone:

Research

Title
Wall slip effects in Rayleigh– Benard convection of viscoplastic materials
Type
JournalPaper
Keywords
Rayleigh–Benard, Wall slip, Yield stress, Slip yield stress, Bingham model, Finite element method
Year
2023
Journal Multidiscipline Modeling in Materials and Structures
DOI
Researchers Mohammad Saeid Aghighi ، Christel Metivier ،

Abstract

Purpose – According to the research, viscoplastic fluids are sensitive to slipping. The purpose of this study is to determine whether slip affects the Rayleigh–Benard convection of viscoplastic fluids in cavities and, if so, under what conditions. Design/methodology/approach – The wall slip was evaluated using a model created for viscoplastic (Bingham) fluids. The coupled conservation equations were solved numerically using the finite element method. Simulations were performed for various parameters: the Rayleigh number, yield number, slip yield number and friction number. Findings – Wall slip determines two essential yield stresses: a specific yield stress value beyond which wall slippage is impossible (S_Yc); and a maximum yield stress beyond which convective flow is impossible (Y_c). At low Rayleigh numbers, Y_c is smaller than S_Yc. Hence, the flow attained a stable (conduction) condition before achieving the no-slip condition. However, for more significant Rayleigh numbers Y_c exceeded S_Yc. Thus, the flow will slip at low yield numbers while remaining no-slip at high yield numbers. The possibility of slipping on the wall increases the buoyancy force, facilitating the onset of Rayleigh– Benard convection. Originality/value – An essential aspect of this study lies in its comprehensive examination of the effect of slippage on the natural convection flow of viscoplastic materials within a cavity, which has not been previously investigated. This research contributes to a new understanding of the viscoplastic fluid behavior resulting from slipping.