Abstract
The stability of fluid flow past a membrane of infinitesimal thickness is analysed in
the limit of zero Reynolds number using linear and weakly nonlinear analyses. The
system consists of two Newtonian fluids of thickness R* and HR*, separated by an
infinitesimally thick membrane, which is flat in the unperturbed state. The dynamics
of the membrane is described by its normal displacement from the flat state, as well
as a surface displacement field which provides the displacement of material points
from their steady-state positions due to the tangential stress exerted by the fluid
flow. The surface stress in the membrane (force per unit length) contains an elastic
component proportional to the strain along the surface of the membrane, and a
viscous component proportional to the strain rate. The linear analysis reveals that the
fluctuations become unstable in the long-wave (α→0) limit when the non-dimensional
strain rate in the fluid exceeds a critical value Λt, and this critical value increases
proportional to α2 in this limit. Here, α is the dimensionless wavenumber of the
perturbations scaled by the inverse of the fluid thickness R*−1, and the dimensionless
strain rate is given by Λt = (γ˙*R*η*/Γ*), where η* is the fluid viscosity, Γ* is the
tension of the membrane and γ˙* is the strain rate in the fluid. The weakly nonlinear
stability analysis shows that perturbations are supercritically stable in the α→0 limit.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
13 articles.
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