scholarly journals Surfactant and gravity dependent instability of two-layer Couette flows and its nonlinear saturation

2017 ◽  
Vol 826 ◽  
pp. 158-204 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander L. Frenkel ◽  
David Halpern

A horizontal channel flow of two immiscible fluid layers with different densities, viscosities and thicknesses, subject to vertical gravitational forces and with an insoluble surfactant monolayer present at the interface, is investigated. The base Couette flow is driven by the uniform horizontal motion of the channel walls. Linear and nonlinear stages of the (inertialess) surfactant and gravity dependent long-wave instability are studied using the lubrication approximation, which leads to a system of coupled nonlinear evolution equations for the interface and surfactant disturbances. The (inertialess) instability is a combined result of the surfactant action characterized by the Marangoni number $Ma$ and the gravitational effect corresponding to the Bond number $Bo$ that ranges from $-\infty$ to $\infty$. The other parameters are the top-to-bottom thickness ratio $n$, which is restricted to $n\geqslant 1$ by a reference frame choice, the top-to-bottom viscosity ratio $m$ and the base shear rate $s$. The linear stability is determined by an eigenvalue problem for the normal modes, where the complex eigenvalues (determining growth rates and phase velocities) and eigenfunctions (the amplitudes of disturbances of the interface, surfactant, velocities and pressures) are found analytically by using the smallness of the wavenumber. For each wavenumber, there are two active normal modes, called the surfactant and the robust modes. The robust mode is unstable when $Bo/Ma$ falls below a certain value dependent on $m$ and $n$. The surfactant branch has instability for $m<1$, and any $Bo$, although the range of unstable wavenumbers decreases as the stabilizing effect of gravity represented by $Bo$ increases. Thus, for certain parametric ranges, even arbitrarily strong gravity cannot completely stabilize the flow. The correlations of vorticity-thickness phase differences with instability, present when gravitational effects are neglected, are found to break down when gravity is important. The physical mechanisms of instability for the two modes are explained with vorticity playing no role in them. This is in marked contrast to the dynamical role of vorticity in the mechanism of the well-known Yih instability due to effects of inertia, and is contrary to some earlier literature. Unlike the semi-infinite case that we previously studied, a small-amplitude saturation of the surfactant instability is possible in the absence of gravity. For certain $(m,n)$-ranges, the interface deflection is governed by a decoupled Kuramoto–Sivashinsky equation, which provides a source term for a linear convection–diffusion equation governing the surfactant concentration. When the diffusion term is negligible, this surfactant equation has an analytic solution which is consistent with the full numerics. Just like the interface, the surfactant wave is chaotic, but the ratio of the two waves turns out to be constant.

2019 ◽  
Vol 863 ◽  
pp. 185-214 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander L. Frenkel ◽  
David Halpern ◽  
Adam J. Schweiger

The joint effects of an insoluble surfactant and gravity on the linear stability of a two-layer Couette flow in a horizontal channel are investigated. The inertialess instability regimes are studied for arbitrary wavelengths and with no simplifying requirements on the system parameters: the ratio of thicknesses of the two fluid layers; the viscosity ratio; the base shear rate; the Marangoni number $Ma$; and the Bond number $Bo$. As was established in the first part of this investigation (Frenkel, Halpern & Schweiger, J. Fluid Mech., vol. 863, 2019, pp. 150–184), a quadratic dispersion equation for the complex growth rate yields two, largely continuous, branches of the normal modes, which are responsible for the flow stability properties. This is consistent with the surfactant instability case of zero gravity studied in Halpern & Frenkel (J. Fluid Mech., vol. 485, 2003, pp. 191–220). The present paper focuses on the mid-wave regimes of instability, defined as those having a finite interval of unstable wavenumbers bounded away from zero. In particular, the location of the mid-wave instability regions in the ($Ma$, $Bo$)-plane, bounded by their critical curves, depending on the other system parameters, is considered. The changes of the extremal points of these critical curves with the variation of external parameters are investigated, including the bifurcation points at which new extrema emerge. Also, it is found that for the less unstable branch of normal modes, a mid-wave interval of unstable wavenumbers may sometimes coexist with a long-wave one, defined as an interval having a zero-wavenumber endpoint.


2019 ◽  
Vol 863 ◽  
pp. 150-184 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander L. Frenkel ◽  
David Halpern ◽  
Adam J. Schweiger

A linear stability analysis of a two-layer plane Couette flow of two immiscible fluid layers with different densities, viscosities and thicknesses, bounded by two infinite parallel plates moving at a constant relative velocity to each other, with an insoluble surfactant monolayer along the interface and in the presence of gravity is carried out. The normal modes approach is applied to the equations governing flow disturbances in the two layers. These equations, together with boundary conditions at the plates and the interface, yield a linear eigenvalue problem. When inertia is neglected the velocity amplitudes are the linear combinations of certain hyperbolic functions, and a quadratic dispersion equation for the increment, that is the complex growth rate, is obtained, where coefficients depend on the aspect ratio, the viscosity ratio, the basic velocity shear, the Marangoni number $Ma$ that measures the effects of surfactant and the Bond number $Bo$ that measures the influence of gravity. An extensive investigation is carried out that examines the stabilizing or destabilizing influences of these parameters. Since the dispersion equation is quadratic in the growth rate, there are two continuous branches of the normal modes: a robust branch that exists even with no surfactant, and a surfactant branch that, to the contrary, vanishes when $Ma\downarrow 0$. Regimes have been uncovered with crossings of the two dispersion curves, their reconnections at the point of crossing and separations as $Bo$ changes. Due to the availability of the explicit forms for the growth rates, in many instances the numerical results are corroborated with analytical asymptotics.


2015 ◽  
Vol 772 ◽  
pp. 535-568 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. V. Goddard ◽  
S. Naire

We consider a viscous drop, loaded with an insoluble surfactant, spreading over an inclined plane that is covered initially with a thin surfactant-free liquid film. Lubrication theory is employed to model the flow using coupled nonlinear evolution equations for the film thickness and surfactant concentration. Exploiting high-resolution numerical simulations, we describe the late-time multi-region asymptotic structure of the spatially one-dimensional spreading flow. A simplified differential–algebraic equation model is derived for key variables characterising the spreading process, using which the late-time spreading and thinning rates are determined. Focusing on the neighbourhood of the drop’s leading-edge effective contact line, we then examine the stability of this region to small-amplitude disturbances with transverse variation. A dispersion relationship is described using long-wavelength asymptotics and numerical simulations, which reveals physical mechanisms and new scaling properties of the instability.


1998 ◽  
Vol 120 (3) ◽  
pp. 598-604 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chi-Chuan Hwang ◽  
Chaur-Kie Lin ◽  
Da-Chih Hou ◽  
Wu-Yih Uen ◽  
Jenn-Sen Lin

Effects of insoluble surfactant on the dynamic rupture of a thin liquid film coated on a flat plate are studied. The strong nonlinear evolution equations derived by the integral method are solved by numerical method. The results show that enhancing (weakening) the Marangoni effect (the surface diffusion effect) will delay the rupture process. Furthermore, the rupture time predicted by the integral theory is shorter than that predicted by the long-wave expansion method. In addition, the quantitative difference in the rupture time predicted by two models enlarges with the increase of Marangoni effect, however, without obvious change as the diffusion effect increases.


2012 ◽  
Vol 614-615 ◽  
pp. 191-194
Author(s):  
Chun Xi Li ◽  
Bing Lu ◽  
Xue Min Ye

Flow of evaporating thin liquid film containing insoluble surfactant on a uniformally heated substrate is considered in this paper. Coupled nonlinear evolution equations for the film thickness and surfactant concentration are derived on the base of lubrication theory and reasonable boundary conditions. The flow stability of the thin liquid film has been studied using normal mode method according to the linear stability theory. The results show that the film stability is promoted by increasing the Capillary number and the surfactant Peclet number, while increasing the Marangoni number, the interface resistance number, the vapor recoil number and the evaporation number can reduce the stability of the system.


2015 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 3134-3138 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mostafa Khater ◽  
Mahmoud A.E. Abdelrahman

In this work, an extended Jacobian elliptic function expansion method is pro-posed for constructing the exact solutions of nonlinear evolution equations. The validity and reliability of the method are tested by its applications to the Couple Boiti-Leon-Pempinelli System which plays an important role in mathematical physics.


Author(s):  
Laxmikanta Mandi ◽  
Kaushik Roy ◽  
Prasanta Chatterjee

Analytical solitary wave solution of the dust ion acoustic waves (DIAWs) is studied in the frame-work of Korteweg-de Vries (KdV), damped force Korteweg-de Vries (DFKdV), damped force modified Korteweg-de Vries (DFMKdV) and damped forced Zakharov-Kuznetsov (DFZK) equations in an unmagnetized collisional dusty plasma consisting of negatively charged dust grain, positively charged ions, Maxwellian distributed electrons and neutral particles. Using reductive perturbation technique (RPT), the evolution equations are obtained for DIAWs.


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