Michael C. Rogers
University of Toronto
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Featured researches published by Michael C. Rogers.
Physics of Fluids | 2009
Michael C. Rogers; Stephen W. Morris
A starting plume or jet has a well-defined, evolving head that is driven through the surrounding quiescent fluid by a localized flux of either buoyancy or momentum, or both. We studied the scaling and morphology of starting plumes produced by a constant flux of buoyant fluid from a small, submerged outlet. The plumes were laminar and spanned a wide range of plume Richardson numbers Ri. Ri is the dimensionless ratio of the buoyancy forces to inertial effects and thus our measurements crossed over the transition between buoyancy-driven plumes and momentum-driven jets. We found that the ascent velocity of the plume, nondimensionalized by Ri, exhibits a power law relationship with Re, the Reynolds number of the injected fluid in the outlet pipe. We also found that as the threshold between buoyancy-driven and momentum-driven flows was crossed, two distinct types of plume head morphologies exist: confined heads, produced in the Ri>1 regime, and dispersed heads, which are found in the Ri 1 regime, and dispersed heads, which are found in the Ri<1 regime. Head dispersal...
Physical Review E | 2010
Michael C. Rogers; Abdelfattah Zebib; Stephen W. Morris
A localized source of buoyancy flux in a nonreactive fluid medium creates a plume. The flux can be provided by either heat, a compositional difference between the fluid comprising the plume and its surroundings, or a combination of both. For autocatalytic plumes produced by the iodate-arsenous acid reaction, however, buoyancy is produced along the entire reacting interface between the plume and its surroundings. Buoyancy production at the moving interface drives fluid motion, which in turn generates flow that advects the reaction front. As a consequence of this interplay between fluid flow and chemical reaction, autocatalytic plumes exhibit a rich dynamics during their ascent through the reactant medium. One of the more interesting dynamical features is the production of an accelerating vortical plume head that in certain cases pinches-off and detaches from the upwelling conduit. After pinch-off, a new plume head forms in the conduit below, and this can lead to multiple generations of plume heads for a single plume initiation. We investigated the pinch-off process using both experimentation and simulation. Experiments were performed using various concentrations of glycerol, in which it was found that repeated pinch-off occurs exclusively in a specific concentration range. Autocatalytic plume simulations revealed that pinch-off is triggered by the appearance of accelerating flow in the plume conduit.
Physical Review Letters | 2005
Harald Ditlbacher; Andreas Hohenau; Dieter Wagner; Uwe Kreibig; Michael C. Rogers; Ferdinand Hofer; F. R. Aussenegg; Joachim R. Krenn
Physical Review Letters | 2005
Michael C. Rogers; Stephen W. Morris
Physical Review E | 2014
Michael C. Rogers; Kui Chen; Lukasz Andrzejewski; Suresh Narayanan; Subramanian Ramakrishnan; Robert L. Leheny; James L. Harden
Physical Review Letters | 2011
Christopher Sanborn; Karl F. Ludwig; Michael C. Rogers; M. Sutton
Physical Review E | 2008
Michael C. Rogers; Mick D. Mantle; Andrew J. Sederman; Stephen W. Morris
Chaos | 2012
Michael C. Rogers; Stephen W. Morris
Physical Review Materials | 2018
Michael C. Rogers; Kui Chen; Matthew J. Pagenkopp; Thomas G. Mason; Suresh Narayanan; James L. Harden; Robert L. Leheny
Archive | 2010
Michael C. Rogers