Thermocapillary flow and natural convection in a melt column with an unknown melt/solid interface
Abstract
A vertical melt column set up between an upper heating rod and a lower sample rod, i.e., the so-called half-zone system, is a convenient experimental tool for studying convection in the melt in floating-zone crystal growth. In order to help understand the convection observed in the melt column, a computer model has been developed to describe steady state, axisymmetrical thermocapillary flow and natural convection in the melt. The governing equations and boundary conditions are expressed in general non-orthogonal curvilinear coordinates in order to accurately treat the unknown melt/solid interface as well as all other physical boundaries in the system. The effects of key dimensionless variables on the following items are discussed: (1) convection and temperature distribution in the melt; (2) the shape of the melt/solid interface; (3) the height of the melt column. These dimensionless variables are the Grashof, Marangoni and Prandtl numbers.
- Publication:
-
International Journal for Numerical Methods in Fluids
- Pub Date:
- January 1991
- DOI:
- 10.1002/fld.1650120105
- Bibcode:
- 1991IJNMF..12...59L
- Keywords:
-
- Capillary Flow;
- Float Zones;
- Free Convection;
- Liquid-Solid Interfaces;
- Melts (Crystal Growth);
- Thermal Diffusion;
- Bessel Functions;
- Boussinesq Approximation;
- Grashof Number;
- Marangoni Convection;
- Navier-Stokes Equation;
- Prandtl Number;
- Sodium Nitrates;
- Fluid Mechanics and Heat Transfer