Nonlinear electrohydrodynamic Kelvin–Helmholtz instability conditions of an interface between two fluids under the effect of a normal periodic electric field

1990 ◽  
Vol 68 (6) ◽  
pp. 479-494 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. F. El Shehawey ◽  
N. R. Abd El Gawaad

The electrohydrodynamic Kelvin–Helmholtz instability conditions of an interface separating two dielectric streaming fluids, stressed by a normal electric field in absence of surface charges on the interface, are studied. We use the method of multiple scales to solve nonlinear equations. In the first-order problem we obtained Mathieu's differential equation. For the second-order problem, we obtain the nonhomogeneous Mathieu equation and we use the method of multiple scales to obtain a sequence of equations. In the third-order problem, we obtain the second-order differential equation of periodic coefficients; we also obtain a formula for surface elevation, and we determine the instability conditions.

Author(s):  
Venkatanarayanan Ramakrishnan ◽  
Brian F. Feeny

The present study deals with the response of a forced nonlinear Mathieu equation. The equation considered has parametric excitation at the same frequency as direct forcing and also has cubic nonlinearity and damping. A second-order perturbation analysis using the method of multiple scales unfolds numerous resonance cases and system behavior that were not uncovered using first-order expansions. All resonance cases are analyzed. We numerically plot the frequency response of the system. The existence of a superharmonic resonance at one third the natural frequency was uncovered analytically for linear system. (This had been seen previously in numerical simulations but was not captured in the first-order expansion.) The effect of different parameters on the response of the system previously investigated are revisited.


Author(s):  
Martin Botello ◽  
Christian Reyes ◽  
Julio Beatriz ◽  
Dumitru I. Caruntu

This paper investigates the voltage response of superharmonic resonance of the second order of electrostatically actuated nano-electro-mechanical system (NEMS) resonator sensor. The structure of the NEMS device is a resonator cantilever over a ground plate under Alternating Current (AC) voltage. Superharmonic resonance of second order occurs when the AC voltage is operating in a frequency near-quarter the natural frequency of the resonator. The forces acting on the system are electrostatic, damping and Casimir. To induce a bifurcation phenomenon in superharmonic resonance, the AC voltage is in the category of hard excitation. The gap distance between the cantilever resonator and base plate is in the range of 20 nm to 1 μm for Casimir forces to be present. The differential equation of motion is converted to dimensionless by choosing the gap as reference length for deflections, the length of the resonator for the axial coordinate, and reference time based on the characteristics of the structure. The Method of Multiple Scales (MMS) and Reduced Order Model (ROM) are used to model the characteristic of the system. MMS transforms the nonlinear partial differential equation of motion into two simpler problems, namely zero-order and first-order. ROM, based on the Galerkin procedure, uses the undamped linear mode shapes of the undamped cantilever beam as the basis functions. The influences of parameters (i.e. Casimir, damping, fringe, and detuning parameter) were also investigated.


1983 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 41-43 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bhimsen K. Shivamoggi

A formal method of multiple scales is used to study the effect of a harmonically varying applied uniform electric field, of magnitude much smaller than the Dreicer critical field Ec, on the runaway electrons in a Lorentz plasma.


2016 ◽  
Vol 09 (02) ◽  
pp. 1650032 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alfaisal A. Hasan

The electrohydrodynamic stability of a self-gravitating streaming compound jet has been investigated for all modes of perturbation. The jets are immersed in a dielectric motionless tenuous medium pervaded by varying electric field. A second-order integro-differential equation of Mathieu type has been derived and some reported works are recovered as limiting cases from it.


Volume 2 ◽  
2004 ◽  
Author(s):  
Asghar Ramezani ◽  
Mehrdaad Ghorashi

In this paper, the large amplitude free vibration of a cantilever Timoshenko beam is considered. To this end, first Hamilton’s principle is used in deriving the partial differential equation of the beam response under the mentioned conditions. Then, implementing the Galerkin’s method the partial differential equation is converted to an ordinary nonlinear differential equation. Finally, the method of multiple scales is used to determine a second order perturbation solution for the obtained ODE. The results show that nonlinearity acts in the direction of increasing the natural frequency of the thick-cantilevered beam.


1994 ◽  
Vol 116 (1) ◽  
pp. 129-136 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. H. Nayfeh ◽  
S. A. Nayfeh

We use several methods to study the nonlinear modes of one-dimensional continuous systems with cubic inertia and geometric nonlinearities. Invariant manifold and perturbation methods applied to the discretized system and the method of multiple scales applied to the partial-differential equation and boundary conditions are discussed and their equivalence is demonstrated. The method of multiple scales is then applied directly to the partial-differential equation and boundary conditions governing several nonlinear beam problems.


2012 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 527-543 ◽  
Author(s):  
Li-Qun Chen ◽  
Hu Ding ◽  
C.W. Lim

Transverse non-linear vibration is investigated in principal parametric resonance of an axially accelerating viscoelastic beam. The axial speed is characterized as a simple harmonic variation about a constant mean speed. The material time derivative is used in the viscoelastic constitutive relation. The transverse motion can be governed by a non-linear partial-differential equation or a non-linear integro-partial-differential equation. The method of multiple scales is applied to the governing equations to determine steady-state responses. It is confirmed that the mode uninvolved in the resonance has no effect on the steady-state response. The differential quadrature schemes are developed to verify results via the method of multiple scales. It is demonstrated that the straight equilibrium configuration becomes unstable and a stable steady-state emerges when the axial speed variation frequency is close to twice any linear natural frequency. The results derived for two governing equations are qualitatively the same, but quantitatively different. Numerical simulations are presented to examine the effects of the mean speed and the variation of the amplitude of the axial speed, the dynamic viscosity, the non-linear coefficients, and the boundary constraint stiffness on the instability interval and the steady-state response amplitude.


Author(s):  
Asghar Ramezani ◽  
Aria Alasty

In this paper, the large amplitude free vibration of a doubly clamped microbeam is considered. The effects of shear deformation and rotary inertia on the large amplitude vibration of the microbeam are investigated. To this end, first Hamilton’s principle is used in deriving the partial differential equation of the microbeam response under the mentioned conditions. Then, implementing the Galerkin’s method the partial differential equation is converted to an ordinary nonlinear differential equation. Finally, the method of multiple scales is used to determine a second order perturbation solution for the obtained ODE. The results show that nonlinearity acts in the direction of increasing the natural frequency of the doubly clamped microbeam. Shear deformation and rotary inertia have significant effects on the large amplitude vibration of thick and short microbeams.


Author(s):  
Dumitru I. Caruntu ◽  
Christian Reyes

This work investigates the voltage response of superharmonic resonance of second order of electrostatically actuated Micro-Electro-Mechanical Systems (MEMS) resonator cantilevers. The results of this work can be used for mass sensors design. The MEMS device consists of MEMS resonator cantilever over a parallel ground plate (electrode) under Alternating Current (AC) voltage. The AC voltage is of frequency near one fourth of the natural frequency of the resonator which leads to the superharmonic resonance of second order. The AC voltage produces an electrostatic force in the category of hard excitations, i.e. for small voltages the resonance is not present while for large voltages resonance occurs and bifurcation points are born. The forces acting on the resonator are electrostatic and damping. The damping force is assumed linear. The Casimir effect and van der Waals effect are negligible for a gap, i.e. the distance between the undeformed resonator and the ground plate, greater than one micrometer and 50 nanometers, respectively, which is the case in this research. The dimensional equation of motion is nondimensionalized by choosing the gap as reference length for deflections, the length of the resonator for the axial coordinate, and reference time based on the characteristics of the structure. The resulting dimensionless equation includes dimensionless parameters (coefficients) such as voltage parameter and damping parameter very important in characterizing the voltage-amplitude response of the structure. The Method of Multiple Scales (MMS) is used to find a solution of the differential equation of motion. MMS transforms the nonlinear partial differential equation of motion into two simpler problems, namely zero-order and first-order. In this work, since the structure is under hard excitations the electrostatic force must be in the zero-order problem. The assumption made in this investigation is that the dimensionless amplitudes are under 0.4 of the gap, and therefore all the terms in the Taylor expansion of the electrostatic force proportional to the deflection or its powers are small enough to be in the first-order problem. This way the zero-order problem solution includes the mode of vibration of the structure, i.e. natural frequency and mode shape, resulting from the homogeneous differential equation, as well as particular solutions due to the nonhomogeneous terms. This solution is then used in the first-order problem to find the voltage-amplitude response of the structure. The influences of frequency and damping on the response are investigated. This work opens the door of using smaller AC frequencies for MEMS resonator sensors.


Author(s):  
Julio Beatriz ◽  
Martin Botello ◽  
Christian Reyes ◽  
Dumitru I. Caruntu

This paper deals with two different methods to analyze the amplitude frequency response of an electrostatically actuated micro resonator. The methods used in this paper are the method of multiple scales, which is an analytical method with one mode of vibration. The other method is based on system of odes which is derived using the partial differential equation of motion, as well as the boundary conditions. This system is then solved using a built in matlab function known as BVP4C. Results are then shown comparing the two methods, under a variety of parameters, including the influence of damping, voltage, and fringe.


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