190 research outputs found
Electrohydrodynamically induced mixing in immiscible multilayer flows
In the present study we investigate electrostatic stabilization mechanisms
acting on stratified fluids. Electric fields have been shown to control and
even suppress the Rayleigh-Taylor instability when a heavy fluid lies above
lighter fluid. From a different perspective, similar techniques can also be
used to generate interfacial dynamics in otherwise stable systems. We aim to
identify active control protocols in confined geometries that induce time
dependent flows in small scale devices without having moving parts. This effect
has numerous applications, ranging from mixing phenomena to electric
lithography. Two-dimensional computations are carried out and several such
protocols are described. We present computational fluid dynamics videos with
different underlying mixing strategies, which show promising results.Comment: Video submission for the gallery of fluid motion, as part of the APS
DFD 2013 conferenc
The route to chaos for the Kuramoto-Sivashinsky equation
The results of extensive numerical experiments of the spatially periodic initial value problem for the Kuramoto-Sivashinsky equation. This paper is concerned with the asymptotic nonlinear dynamics at the dissipation parameter decreases and spatio-temporal chaos sets in. To this end the initial condition is taken to be the same for all numerical experiments (a single sine wave is used) and the large time evolution of the system is followed numerically. Numerous computations were performed to establish the existence of windows, in parameter space, in which the solution has the following characteristics as the viscosity is decreased: a steady fully modal attractor to a steady bimodal attractor to another steady fully modal attractor to a steady trimodal attractor to a periodic attractor, to another steady fully modal attractor, to another periodic attractor, to a steady tetramodal attractor, to another periodic attractor having a full sequence of period-doublings (in parameter space) to chaos. Numerous solutions are presented which provide conclusive evidence of the period-doubling cascades which precede chaos for this infinite-dimensional dynamical system. These results permit a computation of the length of subwindows which in turn provide an estimate for their successive ratios as the cascade develops. A calculation based on the numerical results is also presented to show that the period doubling sequences found here for the Kuramoto-Sivashinsky equation, are in complete agreement with Feigenbaum's universal constant of 4,669201609... . Some preliminary work shows several other windows following the first chaotic one including periodic, chaotic, and a steady octamodal window; however, the windows shrink significantly in size to enable concrete quantitative conclusions to be made
Analytical description of the breakup of liquid jets in air
A viscous or inviscid cylindrical jet with surface tension in a vacuum tends to pinch due to the mechanism of capillary instability. Similarity solutions are constructed which describe this phenomenon as a critical time is encountered, for two physically distinct cases: inviscid jets governed by the Euler equations and highly viscous jets governed by the Stokes equations. In both cases the only assumption imposed is that at the time of pinching the jet shape has a radial length scale which is smaller than the axial length scale. For the inviscid case, we show that our solution corresponds exactly to one member of the one-parameter family of solutions obtained from slender jet theories and the shape of the jet is locally concave at breakup. For highly viscous jets our theory predicts local shapes which are monotonic increasing or decreasing indicating the formation of a mother drop connected to the jet by a thin fluid tube. This qualitative behavior is in complete agreement with both direct numerical simulations and experimental observations
On the breakup of viscous liquid threads
A one-dimensional model evolution equation is used to describe the nonlinear dynamics that can lead to the breakup of a cylindrical thread of Newtonian fluid when capillary forces drive the motion. The model is derived from the Stokes equations by use of rational asymptotic expansions and under a slender jet approximation. The equations are solved numerically and the jet radius is found to vanish after a finite time yielding breakup. The slender jet approximation is valid throughout the evolution leading to pinching. The model admits self-similar pinching solutions which yield symmetric shapes at breakup. These solutions are shown to be the ones selected by the initial boundary value problem, for general initial conditions. Further more, the terminal state of the model equation is shown to be identical to that predicted by a theory which looks for singular pinching solutions directly from the Stokes equations without invoking the slender jet approximation throughout the evolution. It is shown quantitatively, therefore, that the one-dimensional model gives a consistent terminal state with the jet shape being locally symmetric at breakup. The asymptotic expansion scheme is also extended to include unsteady and inerticial forces in the momentum equations to derive an evolution system modelling the breakup of Navier-Stokes jets. The model is employed in extensive simulations to compute breakup times for different initial conditions; satellite drop formation is also supported by the model and the dependence of satellite drop volumes on initial conditions is studied
Description of Jet Breakup
In this article we review recent results on the breakup of cylindrical jets of a Newtonian fluid. Capillary forces provide the main driving mechanism and our interest is in the description of the flow as the jet pinches to form drops. The approach is to describe such topological singularities by constructing local (in time and space) similarity solutions from the governing equations. This is described for breakup according to the Euler, Stokes or Navier-Stokes equations. It is found that slender jet theories can be applied when viscosity is present, but for inviscid jets the local shape of the jet at breakup is most likely of a non-slender geometry. Systems of one-dimensional models of the governing equations are solved numerically in order to illustrate these differences
Falling liquid films with blowing and suction
Flow of a thin viscous film down a flat inclined plane becomes unstable to
long wave interfacial fluctuations when the Reynolds number based on the mean
film thickness becomes larger than a critical value (this value decreases as
the angle of inclination with the horizontal increases, and in particular
becomes zero when the plate is vertical). Control of these interfacial
instabilities is relevant to a wide range of industrial applications including
coating processes and heat or mass transfer systems. This study considers the
effect of blowing and suction through the substrate in order to construct from
first principles physically realistic models that can be used for detailed
passive and active control studies of direct relevance to possible experiments.
Two different long-wave, thin-film equations are derived to describe this
system; these include the imposed blowing/suction as well as inertia, surface
tension, gravity and viscosity. The case of spatially periodic blowing and
suction is considered in detail and the bifurcation structure of forced steady
states is explored numerically to predict that steady states cease to exist for
sufficiently large suction speeds since the film locally thins to zero
thickness giving way to dry patches on the substrate. The linear stability of
the resulting nonuniform steady states is investigated for perturbations of
arbitrary wavelengths, and any instabilities are followed into the fully
nonlinear regime using time-dependent computations. The case of small amplitude
blowing/suction is studied analytically both for steady states and their
stability. Finally, the transition between travelling waves and non-uniform
steady states is explored as the suction amplitude increases
Pinching solutions of slender cylindrical jets
Simplified equations for slender jets are derived for a circular jet of one fluid flowing into an ambient second fluid, the flow being confined in a circular tank. Inviscid flows are studied which include both surface tension effects and Kelvin-Helmholtz instability. For slender jets a coupled nonlinear system of equations is found for the jet shape and the axial velocity jump across it. The equations can break down after a finite time and similarity solutions are constructed, and studied analytically and numerically. The break-ups found pertain to the jet pinching after a finite time, without violation of the slender jet ansatz. The system is conservative and admissible singular solutions are those which conserve the total energy, mass, and momentum. Such solutions are constructed analytically and numerically, and in the case of vortex sheets with no surface tension certain solutions are given in closed form
Nonlinear dynamics of a dispersive anisotropic Kuramoto–Sivashinsky equation in two space dimensions
A Kuramoto–Sivashinsky equation in two space dimensions arising in thin film flows is considered on doubly periodic domains. In the absence of dispersive effects, this anisotropic equation admits chaotic solutions for sufficiently large length scales with fully two-dimensional profiles; the one-dimensional dynamics observed for thin domains are structurally unstable as the transverse length increases. We find that, independent of the domain size, the characteristic length scale of the profiles in the streamwise direction is about 10 space units, with that in the transverse direction being approximately three times larger. Numerical computations in the chaotic regime provide an estimate for the radius of the absorbing ball in ℒ2 in terms of the length scales, from which we conclude that the system possesses a finite energy density. We show the property of equipartition of energy among the low Fourier modes, and report the disappearance of the inertial range when solution profiles are two-dimensional. Consideration of the high-frequency modes allows us to compute an estimate for the analytic extensibility of solutions in ℂ2. We also examine the addition of a physically derived third-order dispersion to the problem; this has a destabilizing effect, in the sense of reducing analyticity and increasing amplitude of solutions. However, sufficiently large dispersion may regularize the spatio-temporal chaos to travelling waves. We focus on dispersion where chaotic dynamics persist, and study its effect on the interfacial structures, absorbing ball and properties of the power spectrum
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