In their way to/from turbulence, plane wall-bounded flows display an
interesting transitional regime where laminar and turbulent oblique bands
alternate, the origin of which is still mysterious. In line with Barkley's
recent work about the pipe flow transition involving reaction-diffusion
concepts, we consider plane Couette flow in the same perspective and transform
Waleffe's classical four-variable model of self-sustaining process into a
reaction-diffusion model. We show that, upon fulfillment of a condition on the
relative diffusivities of its variables, the featureless turbulent regime
becomes unstable against patterning as the result of a Turing instability. A
reduced two-variable model helps us to delineate the appropriate region of
parameter space. An {\it intrinsic} status is therefore given to the pattern's
wavelength for the first time. Virtues and limitations of the model are
discussed, calling for a microscopic support of the phenomenological approach.Comment: to appear in Europhysics Letters in a different forma