Theory of Lubrication With Ferrofluids: Application to Short Bearings

1982 ◽  
Vol 104 (4) ◽  
pp. 510-515 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicolae Tipei

The momentum equations are written for viscous fluids exhibiting magnetic stresses. The velocity profiles are deduced; then from continuity, a pressure differential equation, equivalent to Reynolds equation is obtained. This equation is discussed with emphasis on the case when magnetic stresses derive from a potential, also when the pyromagnetic coefficient vanishes. The boundary conditions for lubrication problems are then formulated. In particular, short bearings with ferromagnetic lubricants are considered. A numerical example yields the pressure diagrams at low and moderate eccentricity ratios and for different speeds. In conclusion, it is shown that ferromagnetic lubricants may improve substantially the performance of bearings operating under low loads and/or at low speeds. However, a correct variation of the magnetic field, toward the center of the lubricated area, is required. Under such conditions, the extent of the active area of the film is increased and bearing stiffness and stability are improved.

2008 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. 531-539
Author(s):  
Temur Jangveladze ◽  
Zurab Kiguradze

Abstract Large time behavior of solutions to the nonlinear integro-differential equation associated with the penetration of a magnetic field into a substance is studied. The rate of convergence is given, too. Dirichlet boundary conditions with homogeneous data are considered.


1998 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 299-305 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fengxin Chen ◽  
Ping Wang ◽  
Chaoshun Qu

In this paper we study the system governing flows in the magnetic field within the earth. The system is similar to the magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) equations. For initial data in spaceLp, we obtained the local in time existence and uniqueness ofweak solutions of the system subject to appropriate initial and boundary conditions.


Author(s):  
Thomas Wiegelmann

Magnetohydrodynamic equilibria are time-independent solutions of the full magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) equations. An important class are static equilibria without plasma flow. They are described by the magnetohydrostatic equations j×B=∇p+ρ∇Ψ,∇×B=μ0j,∇·B=0. B is the magnetic field, j the electric current density, p the plasma pressure, ρ the mass density, Ψ the gravitational potential, and µ0 the permeability of free space. Under equilibrium conditions, the Lorentz force j×B is compensated by the plasma pressure gradient force and the gravity force. Despite the apparent simplicity of these equations, it is extremely difficult to find exact solutions due to their intrinsic nonlinearity. The problem is greatly simplified for effectively two-dimensional configurations with a translational or axial symmetry. The magnetohydrostatic (MHS) equations can then be transformed into a single nonlinear partial differential equation, the Grad–Shafranov equation. This approach is popular as a first approximation to model, for example, planetary magnetospheres, solar and stellar coronae, and astrophysical and fusion plasmas. For systems without symmetry, one has to solve the full equations in three dimensions, which requires numerically expensive computer programs. Boundary conditions for these systems can often be deduced from measurements. In several astrophysical plasmas (e.g., the solar corona), the magnetic pressure is orders of magnitudes higher than the plasma pressure, which allows a neglect of the plasma pressure in lowest order. If gravity is also negligible, Equation 1 then implies a force-free equilibrium in which the Lorentz force vanishes. Generalizations of MHS equilibria are stationary equilibria including a stationary plasma flow (e.g., stellar winds in astrophysics). It is also possible to compute MHD equilibria in rotating systems (e.g., rotating magnetospheres, rotating stellar coronae) by incorporating the centrifugal force. MHD equilibrium theory is useful for studying physical systems that slowly evolve in time. In this case, while one has an equilibrium at each time step, the configuration changes, often in response to temporal changes of the measured boundary conditions (e.g., the magnetic field of the Sun for modeling the corona) or of external sources (e.g., mass loading in planetary magnetospheres). Finally, MHD equilibria can be used as initial conditions for time-dependent MHD simulations. This article reviews the various analytical solutions and numerical techniques to compute MHD equilibria, as well as applications to the Sun, planetary magnetospheres, space, and laboratory plasmas.


Author(s):  
L. E. Fraenkel

AbstractThe formal method of matched expansions is applied to two further examples. The first concerns the magnetic field induced by a steady current in a thin toroidal wire. The second, which involves a non-linear ordinary differential equation of the fourth order, has been chosen to resemble the problem of flow past a circular cylinder at small Reynolds numbers. The results of the formal procedure are proved in each case to be expansions of the exact solution.


Author(s):  
Simona Fialová ◽  
František Pochylý ◽  
Eduard Malenovský

The article contains mathematical models of Reynolds equation with the effects of hydrophobicity of surface and magnetic field. The first section provides a new mathematical model of the solution of the generalized Reynolds equation and its application for a hydrophilic surface. It also derives a new boundary condition for the contact of a flowing liquid with a hydrophobic surface. This wettability condition is defined in dependence on the adhesion coefficient k. The second part presents mathematical models of Reynolds equation including the effect of hydrophobia and magnetic field. For all problems, the solutions are shown and the definitions of the stiffness and damping matrices of the liquid layer are outlined. From the results, it can be deduced that hydrophobic surface significantly affects the velocity profile of the liquid. It leads to a higher effect of the Lorentz force and thus of the magnetic field in comparison with a hydrophilic surface of the bearing lining.


1983 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 172-173
Author(s):  
J. M. Lopez ◽  
J. O. Murphy

The relevance of the results for the total heat energy transported across a fluid layer by convective motions, obtained from the time integrations of the set of non-linear partial differential equations for hydromagnetic convection, has already been designated in a previous contribution (Lopez and Murphy 1982). Some differences in the form of the boundary conditions adopted for the magnetic field disturbance, H, have been noted in other publications where the interaction of convection and a magnetic field has also been considered. The solutions of the time-dependent equations, referenced above, illustrate that the magnetic boundary conditions have a determining role in the resultant convective state for some ranges of values in parameter space.


2020 ◽  
Vol 86 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Axel Brandenburg ◽  
Long Chen

In recent years, several optimal dynamos have been discovered. They minimize the magnetic energy dissipation or, equivalently, maximize the growth rate at a fixed magnetic Reynolds number. In the optimal dynamo of Willis (Phys. Rev. Lett., vol. 109, 2012, 251101), we find mean-field dynamo action for planar averages. One component of the magnetic field grows exponentially while the other decays in an oscillatory fashion near onset. This behaviour is different from that of an $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}^{2}$ dynamo, where the two non-vanishing components of the planar averages are coupled and have the same growth rate. For the Willis dynamo, we find that the mean field is excited by a negative turbulent magnetic diffusivity, which has a non-uniform spatial profile near onset. The temporal oscillations in the decaying component are caused by the corresponding component of the diffusivity tensor being complex when the mean field is decaying and, in this way, time dependent. The growing mean field can be modelled by a negative magnetic diffusivity combined with a positive magnetic hyperdiffusivity. In two other classes of optimal dynamos of Chen et al. (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 783, 2015, pp. 23–45), we find, to some extent, similar mean-field dynamo actions. When the magnetic boundary conditions are mixed, the two components of the planar averaged field grow at different rates when the dynamo is 15 % supercritical. When the mean magnetic field satisfies homogeneous boundary conditions (where the magnetic field is tangential to the boundary), mean-field dynamo action is found for one-dimensional averages, but not for planar averages. Despite having different spatial profiles, both dynamos show negative turbulent magnetic diffusivities. Our finding suggests that negative turbulent magnetic diffusivities may support a broader class of dynamos than previously thought, including these three optimal dynamos.


1997 ◽  
Vol 52 (4) ◽  
pp. 369-371 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. C. Sharma ◽  
P. Kumar

Abstract The thermal instability of a layer of Rivlin-Ericksen elastico-viscous fluid acted on by a uniform vertical magnetic field is considered. For stationary convection, a Rivlin-Ericksen elastico-viscous fluid behaves like a Newtonian fluid. The magnetic field has a stabilizing effect. It is found that the presence of a magnetic field introduces oscillatory modes which were non-existent in its absence. The sufficient condition for the non-existence of overstability is also obtained.


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