41 research outputs found

    Stability of a moving radial liquid sheet: experiments

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    A recent theory (Tirumkudulu & Paramati, Phys. Fluids, vol. 25, 2013, 102107) for a radially expanding liquid sheet, that accounts for liquid inertia, interfacial tension and thinning of the liquid sheet while ignoring the inertia of the surrounding gas and viscous effects, shows that such a sheet is convectively unstable to small sinuous disturbances at all frequencies and Weber numbers. We equivalent to rho(l)U(2)h/sigma). Here, rho(l) and sigma are the density and surface tension of the liquid, respectively, U is the speed of the liquid jet, and h is the local sheet thickness. In this study we use a simple non-contact optical technique based on laser-induced fluorescence (LIF) to measure the instantaneous local sheet thickness and displacement of a circular sheet produced by head-on impingement of two laminar jets. When the impingement point is disturbed via acoustic forcing, sinuous waves produced close to the impingement point travel radially outwards. The phase speed of the sinuous wave decreases while the amplitude grows as they propagate radially outwards. Our experimental technique was unable to detect thickness modulations in the presence of forcing, suggesting that the modulations could be smaller than the resolution of our experimental technique. The measured phase speed of the sinuous wave envelope matches with theoretical predictions while there is a qualitative agreement in the case of spatial growth. We show that there is a range of frequencies over which the sheet is unstable due to both aerodynamic interaction and thinning effects, while outside this range, thinning effects dominate. These results imply that a full theory that describes the dynamics of a radially expanding liquid sheet should account for both effects

    Erosion patterns in a sediment layer

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    We report here on a laboratory-scale experiment which reproduces a rich variety of natural patterns with few control parameters. In particular, we focus on intriguing rhomboid structures often found on sandy shores and flats. We show that the standard views based on water surface waves come short to explain the phenomenon and we evidence a new mechanism based on a mud avalanche instability.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, to appear as Phys. Rev. E rapid com

    Time-aging time-stress superposition in soft glass under tensile deformation field

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    We have studied the tensile deformation behaviour of thin films of aging aqueous suspension of Laponite, a model soft glassy material, when subjected to a creep flow field generated by a constant engineering normal stress. Aqueous suspension of Laponite demonstrates aging behaviour wherein it undergoes time dependent enhancement of its elastic modulus as well as its characteristic relaxation time. However, under application of the normal stress, the rate of aging decreases and in the limit of high stress, the aging stops with the suspension now undergoing a plastic deformation. Overall, it is observed that the aging that occurs over short creep times at small normal stresses is same as the aging that occurs over long creep times at large normal stresses. This observation allows us to suggest an aging time - process time - normal stress superposition principle, which can predict rheological behaviour at longer times by carrying out short time tests.Comment: 26 pages, 7 figures, To appear in Rheologica Act

    Stability of a moving radial liquid sheet: Time-dependent equations

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    We study the stability of a radial liquid sheet produced by head-on impingement of two equal laminar liquid jets. Linear stability equations are derived from the inviscid flow equations for a radially expanding sheet that govern the time-dependent evolution of the two liquid interfaces. The analysis accounts for the varying liquid sheet thickness while the inertial effects due to the surrounding gas phase are ignored. The analysis results in stability equations for the sinuous and the varicose modes of sheet deformation that are decoupled at the lowest order of approximation. When the sheet is excited at a fixed frequency, a small sinuous displacement introduced at the point of impingement grows as it is convected downstream suggesting that the sheet is unstable at all Weber numbers (We rho(l)U(2)h/sigma) in the absence of the gas phase. Here, rho(l) is the density of the liquid, U is the speed of the liquid jet, h is the local sheet thickness, and sigma is the surface tension. The sinuous disturbance diverges at We = 2 which sets the size of the sheet, in agreement with the results of Taylor ["The dynamics of thin sheets of fluid. III. Disintegration of fluid sheets," Proc. R. Soc. London, Ser. A 253, 313 (1959)]. Asymptotic analysis of the sinuous mode for all frequencies shows that the disturbance amplitude diverges inversely with the distance from the edge of the sheet. The varicose waves, on the other hand, are neutrally stable at all frequencies and are convected at the speed of the liquid jet. (C) 2013 AIP Publishing LLC

    Open water bells

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    A smooth circular moving liquid sheet is formed by the head-on impingement of two equal laminar water jets. We subject such a liquid sheet to uniform laminar air flow from one side such that the direction of air velocity is perpendicular to the liquid sheet. The pressure of the moving air deforms the liquid sheet giving rise to an open water bell. The water bell is symmetric suggesting that the gas flow around the bell is also symmetric and that the gravitational force is negligible. We have captured the shape of the water bells for varying air flow rates and for varying Weber numbers, and compared the measurements with theoretical predictions obtained from a force balance involving liquid inertia, surface tension, and pressure difference across the sheet. The pressure exerted by the gas phase on the front and the rear surface of the deformed liquid sheet is obtained from known results of flow past flat circular discs. The predicted steady state shapes match well with the measurements at low Weber numbers but differences are observed at high Weber numbers, where the sheet flaps and is no longer smooth. Interestingly, the shape predicted by assuming a constant pressure difference equal to the stagnation pressure over the whole of the front face of the sheet and free stream value over the whole of the rear face yields nearly identical results suggesting that an open water bell is similar to a closed water bell in that, to a good approximation, the pressure on either sides of the water bell is homogeneous. (C) 2016 AIP Publishing LLC

    An experimental study of impulsively started turbulent axisymmetric jets

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    An impulsively started turbulent jet injected into quiescent surroundings with a constant inlet velocity has been studied experimentally. Results show that the jet length increases linearly with the square-root of time, over a wide range of Reynolds number calculated with respect to the jet diameter. The celerity factor, x f/t U, has been found to be nearly constant at 2.47 throughout with a 5% variance. Here, x f is the jet length, t is the time and U is the jet exit velocity. These results compare favourably with earlier results reported at lower Reynolds numbers. Finally, we present a simple model based on the integral energy balance of the turbulent boundary layer equation for an impulsively started turbulent axisymmetric jet. The model predicts a jet length that scales as, (xf/d)=(9B/10)(tU/d)(x_f/d)=\sqrt{(9B/10) (t U /d) } where d is the nozzle diameter and B(≈6.0) is the velocity-decay constant. This gives a celerity factor, α9B/10=2.32\alpha\equiv \sqrt{9B/10}=2.32 in close agreement with the experiments. Copyright EDP Sciences/Società Italiana di Fisica/Springer-Verlag 200847.27.wg Turbulent jets, 47.27.nb Boundary layer turbulence,
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