TY - JOUR
T1 - Self-similar and disordered front propagation in a radial Hele-Shaw channel with time-varying cell depth
AU - Vaquero-Stainer, Christian
AU - Heil, Matthias
AU - Juel, Anne
AU - Pihler-Puzovic, Draga
PY - 2019/6/6
Y1 - 2019/6/6
N2 - The displacement of a viscous fluid by an air bubble in the narrow gap between two parallel plates can readily drive complex interfacial pattern formation known as viscous fingering. We focus on a modified system suggested recently by [1], in which the onset of the fingering instability is delayed by introducing a time-dependent (power-law) plate separation. We perform a complete linear stability analysis of a depth-averaged theoretical model to show that the plate separation delays the onset of non-axisymmetric instabilities, in qualitative agreement with the predictions obtained from a simplified analysis by [1]. We then employ direct numerical simulations to show that in the parameter regime where the axisymmetrically expanding air bubble is unstable to nonaxisymmetric perturbations, the interface can evolve in a self-similar fashion such that the interface shape at a given time is simply a rescaled version of the shape at an earlier time. These novel, self-similar solutions are linearly stable but they only develop if the initially circular interface is subjected to unimodal perturbations. Conversely, the application of non-unimodal perturbations (e.g. via the superposition of multiple linearly unstable modes) leads to the development of complex, constantly evolving finger patterns similar to those that are typically observed in constant-width Hele-Shaw cells.
AB - The displacement of a viscous fluid by an air bubble in the narrow gap between two parallel plates can readily drive complex interfacial pattern formation known as viscous fingering. We focus on a modified system suggested recently by [1], in which the onset of the fingering instability is delayed by introducing a time-dependent (power-law) plate separation. We perform a complete linear stability analysis of a depth-averaged theoretical model to show that the plate separation delays the onset of non-axisymmetric instabilities, in qualitative agreement with the predictions obtained from a simplified analysis by [1]. We then employ direct numerical simulations to show that in the parameter regime where the axisymmetrically expanding air bubble is unstable to nonaxisymmetric perturbations, the interface can evolve in a self-similar fashion such that the interface shape at a given time is simply a rescaled version of the shape at an earlier time. These novel, self-similar solutions are linearly stable but they only develop if the initially circular interface is subjected to unimodal perturbations. Conversely, the application of non-unimodal perturbations (e.g. via the superposition of multiple linearly unstable modes) leads to the development of complex, constantly evolving finger patterns similar to those that are typically observed in constant-width Hele-Shaw cells.
U2 - 10.1103/PhysRevFluids.4.064002
DO - 10.1103/PhysRevFluids.4.064002
M3 - Article
SN - 2469-990X
JO - Physical Review Fluids
JF - Physical Review Fluids
ER -