THE EFFECT OF WALL INERTIA ON HIGH-FREQUENCY INSTABILITIES OF FLOW THROUGH AN ELASTIC-WALLED TUBE

Martin C Walters, Matthias Heil, Robert J Whittaker

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    Abstract

    We examine the effect of wall inertia on the onset of high-frequency self-excited
    oscillations in flow through an elastic-walled tube. The previous asymptotic model of Whittaker et al. (Proc. Roy. Soc. A 466, 2010), for a long-wavelength high-frequency instability in a Starling-resistor setup, neglected inertia in the tube wall. Here, we extend this model by modifying the ‘tube-law’ for the wall mechanics to include inertial effects. The resulting coupled model for the fluid and solid mechanics is solved to find the normal modes of oscillation for the system, together with their frequencies and growth rates. In the system and parameter regime considered, the addition of wall inertia reduces the oscillation frequency of each mode, however its effect on the stability of the system is not as straightforward. Increasing wall inertia lowers the mean flow rate required for the onset of instability, and is therefore destabilising. However, at higher flow rates the instability growth rate is decreased, and so wall inertia is stabilising here. Overall, the addition of wall inertia decreases the sensitivity of the system to the mean axial flow rate. The theoretical results show good qualitative and reasonable quantitative agreement with direct numerical simulations performed using the oomph-lib framework.
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalQuarterly Journal of Mechanics and Applied Mathematics
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 15 Nov 2017

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