Significant heat transfer enhancement via polymer additives in two-dimensional sheared convection
Abstract: Heat dissipation is critical in modern engineering systems. Polymer additives offer a potential route to improve fluid-based cooling. Here, we study elasticity-enhanced heat transfer in two-dimensional, thermally-stratified Poiseuille flow. At Reynolds numbers, $Re$, $\lesssim 1000$, we observe two types of linearly unstable modes: the recently identified elasticity-induced centre mode (Khalid et al., J. Fluid Mech. 915, 2021) and the classical buoyancy-driven convective mode (Kelly, Adv. Appl. Mech. 31, 35-112, 1994). Direct numerical simulations show that the centre mode develops into a nonlinear arrowhead' state but yields negligible heat transfer enhancement (typically $\approx 0.03\%$ increase compared to the conductive state). By contrast, polymers can enhance the heat flux associated with the convective mode by up to $1100\%$. The nonlinear convective-mode states take the form of either periodic orbits or travelling waves, and are dominated by hook-like polymer-stress structures that can attach to the walls. The unattached hooks act asspeed bumps' that reduced streamwise velocity and promote wall-normal motion, whereas wall-attached hooks form effective `polymer walls', reorganising the flow into strong counter-rotating rolls and triggering the extreme-enhancement regime. The elasto-buoyant nature of these states is confirmed by perturbation kinetic energy budgets, which show that polymer and buoyancy sustain the states synergistically. The wall-attached hooks enable rapid thermal equilibration but impose a large hydraulic penalty, making them suitable for process streams requiring fast temperature adjustment. Unattached hooks provide a more thermally efficient regime for heat-transport applications. These results highlight the potential of elastic fluids for future heat transfer enhancement technologies.
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