viscoelastic instability
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Soft Matter ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (30) ◽  
pp. 6969-6974
Author(s):  
Boyang Qin ◽  
Ranjiangshang Ran ◽  
Paul F. Salipante ◽  
Steven D. Hudson ◽  
Paulo E. Arratia

Using holographic particle tracking, we report the three-dimensional flow structure organizing the viscoelastic instability in cross-channel flow.


2019 ◽  
Vol 865 ◽  
pp. 460-491
Author(s):  
Thibault Vieu ◽  
Innocent Mutabazi

We formulate the Oldroyd-B model for viscoelastic fluids in terms of magnetic-like fields obeying a set of equations analogous to Maxwell’s equations. In the limit of infinite relaxation time for the polymer, the polymeric stress tensor can be identified with the Maxwell stress tensor of a magnetic field. Away from this asymptotic case, the stress tensor of the polymer cannot be decomposed in terms of a tensor product of a magnetic field any more and several theoretical issues arise. We show that the analogy between the Oldroyd-B model and Maxwell’s equations can still be rigorously extended provided that one defines three magnetic-like fields obeying Maxwell’s equations with magnetic currents and charges. This solves the theoretical caveats and leads to a better understanding of the viscoelastic instability. In particular, we evidence a gauge symmetry which unifies some previous works, and we investigate several gauge choices. As an illustration we apply our method to viscoelastic Taylor–Couette flow but this theory of ‘viscoelastic fields’ is general and may be useful in a large variety of viscoelastic flows. The present study may also be of interest from the electromagnetic point of view, as it provides real systems possessing magnetic-like charges (monopoles) and currents.


2017 ◽  
Vol 139 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ming-Xi Tong ◽  
Li-Jun Yang ◽  
Qing-Fei Fu ◽  
Chao-Jie Mo

The Kelvin–Helmholtz instability of viscoelastic flows was examined through a linear instability analysis. Due of the position change of viscoelastic effects, different unstable responses of liquid elastic effects and medium viscous effects were fully investigated. Finally, a comparison of gas/liquid shearing and inviscid aerodynamic effects on sheet instability is conducted.


1997 ◽  
Vol 353 ◽  
pp. 357-381 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. HAJ-HARIRI ◽  
G. M. HOMSY

An analysis of the three-dimensional instability of two-dimensional viscoelastic elliptical flows is presented, extending the inviscid analysis of Bayly (1986) to include both viscous and elastic effects. The problem is governed by three parameters: E, a geometric parameter related to the ellipticity; Re, a wavenumber-based Reynolds number; and De, the Deborah number based on the period of the base flow. New modes and mechanisms of instability are discovered. The flow is generally susceptible to instabilities in the form of propagating plane waves with a rotating wavevector, the tip of which traces an ellipse of the same eccentricity as the flow, but with the major and minor axes interchanged. Whereas a necessary condition for purely inertial instability is that the wavevector has a non-vanishing component along the vortex axis, the viscoelastic modes of instability are most prominent when their wavevectors do vanish along this axis. Our analytical and numerical results delineate the region of parameter space of (E, ReDe) for which the new instability exists. A simple model oscillator equation of the Mathieu type is developed and shown to embody the essential qualitative and quantitative features of the secular viscoelastic instability. The cause of the instability is a buckling of the ‘compressed’ polymers as they are perturbed transversely during a particular phase of the passage of the rotating plane wave.


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