Marangoni convection in water-alumina nanofluids: dependence on the nanoparticle size
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1672443
DOI10.1016/j.euromechflu.2017.09.015zbMath1408.76251OpenAlexW2762583635MaRDI QIDQ1672443
Publication date: 10 September 2018
Published in: European Journal of Mechanics. B. Fluids (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.euromechflu.2017.09.015
linear stabilityBrownian motionMarangoni convectionthermophoresisnanoparticle sizewater-alumina nanofluid
Thin fluid films (76A20) Suspensions (76T20) Free convection (76R10) Convection in hydrodynamic stability (76E06)
Related Items (3)
Marangoni convection in layers of water-based nanofluids under the effect of rotation ⋮ Investigation of Marangoni bio‐thermal convection in layers of nanofluid with gyrotactic microorganisms ⋮ A revised model for the effect of nanoparticle mass flux on the thermal instability of a nanofluid layer
Cites Work
- A critical synthesis of thermophysical characteristics of nanofluids
- Thermal instability of nanofluids in natural convection
- Microfluidics of nano-drug delivery
- The onset of convection in a horizontal nanofluid layer of finite depth
- Thermal effects on Rayleigh-Marangoni-Bénard instability in a system of superposed fluid and porous layers
- Thermal instability in a porous medium layer saturated by a nanofluid
- Exact analysis of Marangoni convection with throughflow
- Oscillatory Marangoni convection in a conducting fluid layer with a deformable free surface in the presence of a vertical magnetic field
- Darcy-Bénard-Marangoni convection in porous media
- The effect of a uniform magnetic field on the onset of steady Bénard- Marangoni convection in a layer of conducting fluid
- Unsteady heat and mass transfer in a rotating nanofluid layer
- On convection cells induced by surface tension
- On the linear stability theory of Bénard–Marangoni convection
- Surface tension and buoyancy effects in cellular convection
This page was built for publication: Marangoni convection in water-alumina nanofluids: dependence on the nanoparticle size