On hydrodynamic stability in unlimited fields of viscous flow

This paper considers the hydrodynamic stability of flows in which there are no solid boundaries in the field of flow. The method used is an extension of that initiated by McKoen (1957), in which the fourth derivative, 0 iv , is assumed to be significant only near to the singular layer, but otherwise the complete fourth-order Orr—Sommerfeld equation is considered. An alternative derivation is given for McKoen’s integral form of the boundary condition for an antisymmetrical perturbation. In this integral it is necessary to approximate for (j) but not for any of its derivatives. It is shown that the present method will always lead to a neutral stability curve of wave number against Reynolds number, having two branches as R ->oo and hence a least critical R . The case of the plane laminar jet is considered, and a critical Reynolds number of 4 is obtained, which does not compare unreasonably with experiment in which unsteadiness is first detected at a Reynolds number of about 10. The lower branch of the neutral curve is found to be almost coincident with the R -axis.

1958 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 261-275 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Tatsumi ◽  
T. Kakutani

This paper deals with the stability of a two-dimensional laminar jet against the infinitesimal antisymmetric disturbance. The curve of the neutral stability in the (α, R)-plane (α, the wave-number; R, Reynolds number) is calculated using two different methods for the different parts of the curve; the solution is developed in powers of (αR)−1 for obtaining the upper branch of the curve and in powers of αR for the lower branch.The asymptotic behaviour of these branches is that for branch I,$\alpha \rightarrow 2, \;\; c \rightarrow \frac{2}{3}$ for $R \rightarrow \infty$; and for branch II, $R \sim 1\cdot12\alpha^{-1|2},\; c \sim 1\cdot 20 \alpha^2$ for α → 0. Some discussion is given on the validity of the basic assumption of the stability theory in relation to the numerical result obtained here.


2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 52-58 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.D. Nizamova ◽  
V.N. Kireev ◽  
S.F. Urmancheev

The flow of a viscous model fluid in a flat channel with a non-uniform temperature field is considered. The problem of the stability of a thermoviscous fluid is solved on the basis of the derived generalized Orr-Sommerfeld equation by the spectral decomposition method in Chebyshev polynomials. The effect of taking into account the linear and exponential dependences of the fluid viscosity on temperature on the spectral characteristics of the hydrodynamic stability equation for an incompressible fluid in a flat channel with given different wall temperatures is investigated. Analytically obtained profiles of the flow rate of a thermovisible fluid. The spectral pictures of the eigenvalues of the generalized Orr-Sommerfeld equation are constructed. It is shown that the structure of the spectra largely depends on the properties of the liquid, which are determined by the viscosity functional dependence index. It has been established that for small values of the thermoviscosity parameter the spectrum compares the spectrum for isothermal fluid flow, however, as it increases, the number of eigenvalues and their density increase, that is, there are more points at which the problem has a nontrivial solution. The stability of the flow of a thermoviscous fluid depends on the presence of an eigenvalue with a positive imaginary part among the entire set of eigenvalues found with fixed Reynolds number and wavenumber parameters. It is shown that with a fixed Reynolds number and a wave number with an increase in the thermoviscosity parameter, the flow becomes unstable. The spectral characteristics determine the structure of the eigenfunctions and the critical parameters of the flow of a thermally viscous fluid. The eigenfunctions constructed in the subsequent works show the behavior of transverse-velocity perturbations, their possible growth or decay over time.


When two parallel plates move normal to each other with a slow time-dependent speed, the velocity field developed in the intervening film of fluid is approximately that of plane Poiseuille flow, except that the magnitude of the velocity is dependent on time and on the coordinate parallel to the planes. This fact is intrinsic to Reynolds’ lubrication theory, and can be shown to follow from the Navier-Stokes equations when both the modified Reynolds number ( Re M ) and an aspect ratio ( δ ) are small. The modified Reynolds number is the product of δ and an actual Reynolds number ( Re ), which is based on the gap between the planes and on a characteristic velocity. The occurrence of flow instability and of turbulence in the film depend on Re . Typical values of Re , which are known to be required for the linear instability of plane Poiseuille flow, are of order 6000. This condition can be achieved, even if Re M is of order 1, provided that δ is of order 10 -4 . Such parameter values are typical of lubrication problems. The Orr-Sommerfeld equation governing flow instability is derived in this paper by use of the WKBJ technique, δ being the approximate small parameter to represent the small length-scale of the disturbance oscillations compared with the larger scale of the basic laminar flow. However, the coefficients in the Orr-Sommerfeld equation depend on slow space and time variables. Consequently the eigenrelation, derivable from the Orr-Sommerfeld equation and the associated boundary conditions, constitutes a nonlinear first-order partial differential equation for a phase function. This equation is solved by use of Charpit’s method for certain special forms of the time-dependent gap between the planes, followed by detailed numerical calculations. The relation between time-dependence and flow instability is delineated by the calculated results. In detail the nature of the instability can be described as follows. We consider a disturbance wave at or near a particular station, the initial distribution of amplitude being gaussian in the slow coordinate parallel to the planes. In the context of the Orr-Sommerfeld equation and its eigenrelation, the particular station implies an equivalent Reynolds number, while the initial distribution of the disturbance wave implies an equivalent wavenumber. As time increases, the disturbance wave can be considered to move in the instability diagram of equivalent wavenumber against Reynolds number, in the sense that these parameters are time- and space-dependent for the evolution of the disturbance-wave system. For our detailed calculations we use a quadratic approximation to the eigenrelation, an approximation which is quite accurate. If the initial distribution implies a point within the neutral curve, when the plates are squeezed together the equivalent wavenumber falls while the equivalent Reynolds number rises, and amplification takes place until the lower branch of the neutral curve is nearly crossed. If the plates are pulled apart (dilatation) the equivalent wavenumber rises, while the Reynolds number drops, and amplification takes place until the upper branch of the neutral curve has been just crossed. In the case of dilatation the transition from amplification to damping takes place more quickly than for the case of squeezing, in part due to the geometry of the neutral curve.


Author(s):  
Amin Doostmohammadi ◽  
Seyyedeh Negin Mortazavi

In this paper, we study the hydrodynamic stability of a viscoelastic Walters B liquid in the Blasius flow. A linearized stability analysis is used and orthogonal polynomials which are related to de Moivre’s formula are implemented to solve Orr–Sommerfeld eigenvalue equation. An analytical approach is used in order to find the conditions of instability for Blasius flow and Critical Reynolds number is found for various combinations of the elasticity number. Based on the results, the destabilizing effect of elasticity on Blasius flow is determined and interpreted.


1972 ◽  
Vol 52 (3) ◽  
pp. 401-423 ◽  
Author(s):  
Timothy W. Kao ◽  
Cheol Park

The stability of the laminar co-current flow of two fluids, oil and water, in a rectangular channel was investigated experimentally, with and without artificial excitation. For the ratio of viscosity explored, only the disturbances in water grew in the beginning stages of transition to turbulence. The critical water Reynolds number, based upon the hydraulic diameter of the channel and the superficial velocity defined by the ratio of flow rate of water to total cross-sectional area of the channel, was found to be 2300. The behaviour of damped and growing shear waves in water was examined in detail using artificial excitation and briefly compared with that observed in Part 1. Mean flow profiles, the amplitude distribution of disturbances in water, the amplification rate, wave speed and wavenumbers were obtained. A neutral stability boundary in the wave-number, water Reynolds number plane was also obtained experimentally.It was found that in natural transition the interfacial mode was not excited. The first appearance of interfacial waves was actually a manifestation of the shear waves in water. The role of the interface in the transition range from laminar to turbulent flow in water was to introduce and enhance spanwise oscillation in the water phase and to hasten the process of breakdown for growing disturbances.


1968 ◽  
Vol 90 (1) ◽  
pp. 109-114 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ahmed R. Wazzan ◽  
T. Okamura ◽  
A. M. O. Smith

The theory of two-dimensional instability of laminar flow of water over solid surfaces is extended to include the effects of heat transfer. The equation that governs the stability of these flows to Tollmien-Schlichting disturbances is the Orr-Sommerfeld equation “modified” to include the effect of viscosity variation with temperature. Numerical solutions to this equation at high Reynolds numbers are obtained using a new method of integration. The method makes use of the Gram-Schmidt orthogonalization technique to obtain linearly independent solutions upon numerically integrating the “modified Orr-Sommerfeld” equation using single precision arithmetic. The method leads to satisfactory answers for Reynolds numbers as high as Rδ* = 100,000. The analysis is applied to the case of flow over both heated and cooled flat plates. The results indicate that heating and cooling of the wall have a large influence on the stability of boundary-layer flow in water. At a free-stream temperature of 60 deg F and wall temperatures of 60, 90, 120, 135, 150, 200, and 300deg F, the critical Reynolds numbers Rδ* are 520, 7200, 15200, 15600, 14800, 10250, and 4600, respectively. At a free-stream temperature of 200F and wall temperature of 60 deg F (cooled case), the critical Reynolds number is 151. Therefore, it is evident that a heated wall has a stabilizing effect, whereas a cooled wall has a destabilizing effect. These stability calculations show that heating increases the critical Reynolds number to a maximum value (Rδ* max = 15,700 at a temperature of TW = 130 deg F) but that further heating decreases the critical Reynolds number. In order to determine the influence of the viscosity derivatives upon the results, the critical Reynolds number for the heated case of T∞ = 40 and TW = 130 deg F was determined using (a) the Orr-Sommerfeld equation and (b) the present governing equation. The resulting critical Reynolds numbers are Rδ* = 140,000 and 16,200, respectively. Therefore, it is concluded that the terms pertaining to the first and second derivatives of the viscosity have a considerable destabilizing influence.


1971 ◽  
Vol 50 (4) ◽  
pp. 689-703 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven A. Orszag

The Orr-Sommerfeld equation is solved numerically using expansions in Chebyshev polynomials and the QR matrix eigenvalue algorithm. It is shown that results of great accuracy are obtained very economically. The method is applied to the stability of plane Poiseuille flow; it is found that the critical Reynolds number is 5772·22. It is explained why expansions in Chebyshev polynomials are better suited to the solution of hydrodynamic stability problems than expansions in other, seemingly more relevant, sets of orthogonal functions.


2017 ◽  
Vol 821 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. H. Allouche ◽  
V. Botton ◽  
S. Millet ◽  
D. Henry ◽  
S. Dagois-Bohy ◽  
...  

The main objective of this work is to study experimentally the primary instability of non-Newtonian film flows down an inclined plane. We focus on low-concentration shear-thinning aqueous solutions obeying the Carreau law. The experimental study essentially consists of measuring wavelengths in marginal conditions, which yields the primary stability threshold for a given slope. The experimental results for neutral curves presented in the $(Re,f_{c})$ and $(Re,k)$ planes (where $f_{c}$ is the driving frequency, $k$ is the wavenumber and $Re$ is the Reynolds number) are in good agreement with the numerical results obtained by a resolution of the generalized Orr–Sommerfeld equation. The long-wave asymptotic extension of our results is consistent with former theoretical predictions of the critical Reynolds number. This is the first experimental evidence of the destabilizing effect of the shear-thinning behaviour in comparison with the Newtonian case: the critical Reynolds number is smaller, and the ratio between the critical wave celerity and the flow velocity at the free surface is larger.


The comparison equation method is used to study the outer expansions of the solutions of the Orr-Sommerfeld equation. All but one of these expansions are multiple-valued and must therefore exhibit the Stokes phenomenon. One of the major aims of the present paper is to obtain first approximations to the Stokes multipliers which describe the continuation of these expansions on crossing a Stokes line in the complex plane. By restricting the domains of validity of these expansions appropriately we can insure that all of the expansions are ‘complete ’ in the sense of Olver and this is an essential feature of the work. The resulting approximations show that, in some sectors, a sharp distinction can no longer be made between approximations of inviscid and viscous type. A consistent first-order approximation to the characteristic equation in the complete sense is derived and compared with the more usual second-order approximation of Poincare type. Calculations of the curve of neutral stability for plane Poiseuille flow clearly show that a first approximation in the complete sense provides a substantially better approximation to the neutral curve than a second approximation in the Poincare sense.


1971 ◽  
Vol 49 (2) ◽  
pp. 305-318 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. R. Munson ◽  
D. D. Joseph

The energy theory of hydrodynamic stability is applied to the viscous incompressible flow of a fluid contained between two concentric spheres which rotate about a common axis with prescribed angular velocities. The critical Reynolds number is calculated for various radius and angular velocity ratios such that it is certain the basic laminar motion is stable to any disturbances. The stability problem is solved by means of a toroidal–poloidal representation of the disturbance flow and numerical integration of the resulting eigenvalue problem.


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