Influence of capillarity and gravity on ...
Document type :
Article dans une revue scientifique: Article original
Title :
Influence of capillarity and gravity on confined Faraday waves
Author(s) :
Diwakar, S. [Auteur]
Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research [JNCASR]
Jajoo, Vibhor [Auteur]
Université de Bordeaux [UB]
Amiroudine, Sakir [Auteur]
Université de Bordeaux [UB]
Matsumoto, Satoshi [Auteur]
Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency [Tsukuba] [JAXA]
Narayanan, Ranga [Auteur]
University of Florida [Gainesville] [UF]
Zoueshtiagh, Farzam [Auteur]
Acoustique Impulsionnelle & Magnéto-Acoustique Non linéaire - Fluides, Interfaces Liquides & Micro-Systèmes - IEMN [AIMAN-FILMS - IEMN]
Institut d’Électronique, de Microélectronique et de Nanotechnologie - UMR 8520 [IEMN]
Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research [JNCASR]
Jajoo, Vibhor [Auteur]
Université de Bordeaux [UB]
Amiroudine, Sakir [Auteur]
Université de Bordeaux [UB]
Matsumoto, Satoshi [Auteur]
Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency [Tsukuba] [JAXA]
Narayanan, Ranga [Auteur]
University of Florida [Gainesville] [UF]
Zoueshtiagh, Farzam [Auteur]

Acoustique Impulsionnelle & Magnéto-Acoustique Non linéaire - Fluides, Interfaces Liquides & Micro-Systèmes - IEMN [AIMAN-FILMS - IEMN]
Institut d’Électronique, de Microélectronique et de Nanotechnologie - UMR 8520 [IEMN]
Journal title :
Physical Review Fluids
Pages :
-
Publisher :
American Physical Society
Publication date :
2018
ISSN :
2469-990X
HAL domain(s) :
Sciences de l'ingénieur [physics]
English abstract : [en]
Experiments characterizing the influence of gravity and interfacial tension on Faraday instability in immiscible, confined fluid layers are presented. The variation in interfacial tension was obtained by controlling the ...
Show more >Experiments characterizing the influence of gravity and interfacial tension on Faraday instability in immiscible, confined fluid layers are presented. The variation in interfacial tension was obtained by controlling the temperature of a suitable binary fluid pair while the influence of gravity was analyzed through a series of terrestrial and microgravity (parabolic flight) experiments. These experiments confirm the existence of a crossover frequency, on either side of which gravity plays opposing roles. The current experiments also reveal that the neutral stability curves under Earth's gravity drift toward lower frequencies as the temperature of the liquid pair approaches its upper consolutal value, i.e., the temperature of complete miscibility. Such drifts in the low frequency range are shown to occur primarily due to the reduction in density difference between the layers, whereas at very high frequencies they are controlled by the lowering of interfacial tension. In the absence of gravity, the Faraday waves are characterized by larger wave numbers, and, as in terrestrial conditions, the instability thresholds at high frequencies increase with an increase of temperature, i.e., reduction in interfacial tension value. This surprising stabilization originates from the lowering of the critical wavelength that leads to increased viscous dissipation.Show less >
Show more >Experiments characterizing the influence of gravity and interfacial tension on Faraday instability in immiscible, confined fluid layers are presented. The variation in interfacial tension was obtained by controlling the temperature of a suitable binary fluid pair while the influence of gravity was analyzed through a series of terrestrial and microgravity (parabolic flight) experiments. These experiments confirm the existence of a crossover frequency, on either side of which gravity plays opposing roles. The current experiments also reveal that the neutral stability curves under Earth's gravity drift toward lower frequencies as the temperature of the liquid pair approaches its upper consolutal value, i.e., the temperature of complete miscibility. Such drifts in the low frequency range are shown to occur primarily due to the reduction in density difference between the layers, whereas at very high frequencies they are controlled by the lowering of interfacial tension. In the absence of gravity, the Faraday waves are characterized by larger wave numbers, and, as in terrestrial conditions, the instability thresholds at high frequencies increase with an increase of temperature, i.e., reduction in interfacial tension value. This surprising stabilization originates from the lowering of the critical wavelength that leads to increased viscous dissipation.Show less >
Language :
Anglais
Peer reviewed article :
Oui
Audience :
Internationale
Popular science :
Non
European Project :
Source :
Files
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevfluids.3.073902
- Open access
- Access the document
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevfluids.3.073902
- Open access
- Access the document
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevfluids.3.073902
- Open access
- Access the document
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevfluids.3.073902
- Open access
- Access the document
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevfluids.3.073902
- Open access
- Access the document
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevfluids.3.073902
- Open access
- Access the document
- physrevfluids.3.073902
- Open access
- Access the document
- document
- Open access
- Access the document
- PhysRevFluids.3.073902.pdf
- Open access
- Access the document
- document
- Open access
- Access the document
- PhysRevFluids.3.073902.pdf
- Open access
- Access the document