Physical scientists and engineers review the research on movement and mixing in bodies of fluid that have distinct layers. They cover resonances and mixing in near-integrable volume-preserving systems, fluid stirring in a tilted rotating tank, Lagrangian coherent structures, interfacial transfer from stirred laminar flows, the effects of laminar mixing on reaction fronts and patterns, and microfluidic flows of viscoelastic fluids. The material should interest scientists working on fundamental aspects of the transport problem, and engineers using recent research findings to design new microfluidic devices. Annotation ©2012 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
This book provides readers from academia and industry with an up-to-date overview of important advances in the field, dealing with such fundamental fluid mechanics problems as nonlinear transport phenomena and optimal control of mixing at the micro- and nanoscale.
The editors provide both in-depth knowledge of the topic as well as vast experience in guiding an expert team of authors. The review style articles offer a coherent view of the micromixing methods, resulting in a much-needed synopsis of the theoretical models needed to direct experimental research and establish engineering principles for future applications.
Since these processes are governed by nonlinear phenomena, this book will appeal to readers from both communities: fluid mechanics and nonlinear dynamics.
Arvustused
The material should interest scientists working on fundamental aspects of the transport problem, and engineers using recent research findings to design new microfluidic devices. (Book News, 1 April 2012)
Introduction
Mixing in laminar fluid flows: From microfluidics to oceanic currents (R.O.
Grigoriev, Georgia Institute of Technology)
1. Resonance and Mixing in near-integrable volume-preserving systems (D.
Vainchtein, Temple University)
2. Fluid stirring in a tilted rotating tank (Th. Ward, North Carolina State
University)
3. Lagrangian Coherent Structures (Sh.C. Shadden, Illinois Institute of
Technology)
4. Interfacial Transfer from Stirred Laminar Flows (J.D. Kirtland, Dordt
College, and A.D. Stroock, Cornell University)
5. The effects of laminar mixing on reaction fronts and patterns (T.
Solomon, Bucknell University)
6. Microfluidic flows of viscoelastic fluid (M.S.N. Oliveira, M.A. Alves,
F.T. Pinho, University of Porto)
Roman Grigoriev got his PhD at the California Institute of Technology and became a Research Associate at the University of Chicago before he moved to Georgia Tech. Professor Grigoriev's research on nonequilibrium systems such as fluids, lasers and living systems ranges from mixing in fluids, thin liquid films and wide aperture lasers to the heart muscle.
Heinz Georg Schuster is Professor of Theoretical Physics at the University of Kiel in Germany. He was a visiting professor at the Weizmann-Institute of Science in Israel and at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, USA. He authored and edited many books on nonlinear phenomena and chaos control.