We study the combined effects of nonlocal elasticity and confinement induced
ordering on the dynamics of thermomolecular pressure gradient driven premelted
films bound by an elastic membrane. The confinement induced ordering is modeled
using a film thickness dependent viscosity. When there is no confinement
induced ordering, we recover the similarity solution for the evolution of the
elastic membrane, which exhibits an infinite sequence of oscillations. However,
when the confinement induced viscosity is comparable to the bulk viscosity, the
numerical solutions of the full system reveal the conditions under which the
oscillations and similarity solutions vanish. Implications of our results for
general thermomechanical dynamics, frost heave observations and cryogenic cell
preservation are discussed. Finally, through its influence on the viscosity,
the confinement effect implicitly introduces a new universal length scale into
the volume flux. Thus, there are a host of thin film problems, from droplet
breakup to wetting/dewetting dynamics, whose properties (similarity solutions,
regularization, and compact support) will change under the action of the
confinement effect. Therefore, our study suggests revisiting the mathematical
structure and experimental implications of a wide range of problems within the
framework of the confinement effect.Comment: 18 Pages, 12 Figure