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We present mesoscale numerical simulations of Rayleigh-B{e}nard convection in a two-dimensional concentrated emulsion, confined between two parallel walls, heated from below and cooled from above, under the effect of buoyancy forces. The systems under study comprise finite-size droplets, whose concentration $Phi_0$ is varied, ranging from the dilute limit up to the point where the emulsion starts to be packed and exhibits non-Newtonian rheology. We focus on the characterisation of the convective heat transfer properties close to the transition from conductive to convective states. The convective flow is confined and heterogeneous, which causes the emulsion to exhibit concentration heterogeneities in space $phi_0(y)$, depending on the location in the wall-to-wall direction ($y$). With the aim of assessing quantitatively the heat transfer efficiency of such heterogeneous systems, we resort to a side-by-side comparison between the concentrated emulsion system and a single-phase (SP) system, whose local viscosity $eta^{mbox{SP}}(y)$ is suitably constructed from the shear rheology of the emulsion. Such comparison highlights that a suitable degree $Lambda$ of coarse-graining needs to be introduced in the local viscosity $eta_{Lambda}^{mbox{SP}}(y)$, in order for the single-phase system to attain the same heat transfer efficiency of the emulsion. Specifically, it is shown that a quantitative matching between the two systems is possible whenever the coarse-graining is performed over a scale of the order of the droplet size.
If a fluid flow is driven by a weak Gaussian random force, the nonlinearity in the Navier-Stokes equations is negligibly small and the resulting velocity field obeys Gaussian statistics. Nonlinear effects become important as the driving becomes stron
Multi-fluid models have recently been proposed as an approach to improving the representation of convection in weather and climate models. This is an attractive framework as it is fundamentally dynamical, removing some of the assumptions of mass-flux
We present mesoscale numerical simulations of Rayleigh-Benard (RB) convection in a two-dimensional model emulsion. The systems under study are constituted of finite-size droplets, whose concentration Phi_0 is systematically varied from small (Newtoni
For two-dimensional Rayleigh-B{e}nard convection, classes of unstable, steady solutions were previously computed using numerical continuation (Waleffe, 2015; Sondak, 2015). The `primary steady solution bifurcates from the conduction state at $Ra appr
The shape of velocity and temperature profiles near the horizontal conducting plates in turbulent Rayleigh-B{e}nard convection are studied numerically and experimentally over the Rayleigh number range $10^8lesssim Ralesssim3times10^{11}$ and the Pran