{"title":"Stability analysis of viscous multi-layer shear flows with interfacial slip","authors":"A. Katsiavria, Demetrios T Papageorgiou","doi":"10.1093/imamat/hxae012","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"\n One of the most fundamental interfacial instabilities in ideal, immiscible, incompressible multifluid flows is the celebrated Kelvin-Helmholtz (KH) instability. It predicts short-wave instabilities that in the absence of other mollifying physical mechanisms (e.g. surface tension, viscosity) render the nonlinear problem ill-posed and lead to finite-time singularities. The crucial driving mechanism is the jump in tangential velocity across the liquid-liquid interface, i.e. interfacial slip, that can occur since viscosity is absent. The purpose of the present work is to analyse analogous instabilities for viscous flows at small or moderate Reynolds numbers as opposed to the infinite Reynolds numbers that underpin KH instabilities. The problem is physically motivated by both experiments and simulations. The fundamental model considered consists of two superposed viscous, incompressible, immiscible fluid layers sheared in a plane Couette flow configuration, with slip present at the deforming liquid-liquid interface. The origin of slip in viscous flows has been observed in experiments and molecular dynamics simulations, and can be modelled by employing a Navier-slip boundary condition at the liquid-liquid interface. The emerging novel instabilities are studied in detail here. The linear stability of the system is addressed asymptotically for long- and short-waves, and for arbitrary wavenumbers using a combination of analytical and numerical calculations. Slip is found to be capable of destabilising perturbations of all wavelengths. In regimes where the flow is stable to perturbations of all wavelengths in the absence of slip, its presence can induce a Turing-type instability by destabilisation of a small band of finite wavenumber perturbations. In the case where the underlying layer is asymptotically thin, the results are found to agree with the linear properties of a weakly non-linear asymptotic model that is also derived here. The weakly nonlinear model extends previous work by the authors that had a thin overlying layer that produces a different evolution equation.","PeriodicalId":56297,"journal":{"name":"IMA Journal of Applied Mathematics","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":1.4000,"publicationDate":"2024-06-13","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"IMA Journal of Applied Mathematics","FirstCategoryId":"100","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1093/imamat/hxae012","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"数学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"MATHEMATICS, APPLIED","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
One of the most fundamental interfacial instabilities in ideal, immiscible, incompressible multifluid flows is the celebrated Kelvin-Helmholtz (KH) instability. It predicts short-wave instabilities that in the absence of other mollifying physical mechanisms (e.g. surface tension, viscosity) render the nonlinear problem ill-posed and lead to finite-time singularities. The crucial driving mechanism is the jump in tangential velocity across the liquid-liquid interface, i.e. interfacial slip, that can occur since viscosity is absent. The purpose of the present work is to analyse analogous instabilities for viscous flows at small or moderate Reynolds numbers as opposed to the infinite Reynolds numbers that underpin KH instabilities. The problem is physically motivated by both experiments and simulations. The fundamental model considered consists of two superposed viscous, incompressible, immiscible fluid layers sheared in a plane Couette flow configuration, with slip present at the deforming liquid-liquid interface. The origin of slip in viscous flows has been observed in experiments and molecular dynamics simulations, and can be modelled by employing a Navier-slip boundary condition at the liquid-liquid interface. The emerging novel instabilities are studied in detail here. The linear stability of the system is addressed asymptotically for long- and short-waves, and for arbitrary wavenumbers using a combination of analytical and numerical calculations. Slip is found to be capable of destabilising perturbations of all wavelengths. In regimes where the flow is stable to perturbations of all wavelengths in the absence of slip, its presence can induce a Turing-type instability by destabilisation of a small band of finite wavenumber perturbations. In the case where the underlying layer is asymptotically thin, the results are found to agree with the linear properties of a weakly non-linear asymptotic model that is also derived here. The weakly nonlinear model extends previous work by the authors that had a thin overlying layer that produces a different evolution equation.
期刊介绍:
The IMA Journal of Applied Mathematics is a direct successor of the Journal of the Institute of Mathematics and its Applications which was started in 1965. It is an interdisciplinary journal that publishes research on mathematics arising in the physical sciences and engineering as well as suitable articles in the life sciences, social sciences, and finance. Submissions should address interesting and challenging mathematical problems arising in applications. A good balance between the development of the application(s) and the analysis is expected. Papers that either use established methods to address solved problems or that present analysis in the absence of applications will not be considered.
The journal welcomes submissions in many research areas. Examples are: continuum mechanics materials science and elasticity, including boundary layer theory, combustion, complex flows and soft matter, electrohydrodynamics and magnetohydrodynamics, geophysical flows, granular flows, interfacial and free surface flows, vortex dynamics; elasticity theory; linear and nonlinear wave propagation, nonlinear optics and photonics; inverse problems; applied dynamical systems and nonlinear systems; mathematical physics; stochastic differential equations and stochastic dynamics; network science; industrial applications.