Article révisé par les pairs
Résumé : Vibrations acting on a fluid with density gradient induced by temperature variations can cause relative flows. High-frequency vibration leads to the appearance of time-averaged (mean) flows (or streaming flows), which can essentially affect heat and mass transfer processes. This phenomenon is most pronounced in the absence of other external forces (in particular, static gravity). In this work, an extensive experimental and computational study of thermal vibrational convection in a reduced-gravity environment of a parabolic flight is performed. The transient evolution of the temperature field in a cubic cell subjected to translational vibration is investigated by optical digital interferometry. The mean flow structures previously reported in numerical studies are confirmed. The transition from four-vortex flow to a pattern with a large diagonal vortex and two small vortices is observed in the transient state. The experiments reveal a significant enhancement of heat transfer by vibrational mean flows with increasing the vibrational strength. Three-dimensional direct numerical simulation with real microgravity profile and two-dimensional numerical modelling based on averaging approach provide a very good agreement with the experimental results. The influence of residual gravity on heat transfer and bifurcation scenario is first investigated numerically and correlated with the experimental data. It is demonstrated that gravity effects on non-uniformly heated fluids can be reproduced in weightlessness by applying vibrations to the system. © 2010 Cambridge University Press.