Abstract
A thin-film approximation is used to study the effects of
surface tension on a thin liquid layer lining the interior of a
cylindrical tube, where the tube has radius a and a
centreline with weak, uniform curvature δ/a.
Centreline curvature induces a pressure gradient in the fluid layer,
analogous to that due to a weak gravitational field, that drives
fluid from the inner to the outer wall of the tube, i.e. away from
the centre of centreline curvature. The resulting draining flow is
computed numerically under the assumption of axial uniformity, and
the large-time asymptotic draining regimes and flow structures are
identified. In the absence of destabilizing intermolecular
interactions, the inner wall remains wet, covered with a vanishingly
thin fluid layer, while a near-equilibrium lobe forms on the outer
wall. The stability of this quasi-static lobe to axial variations is
then investigated by using numerical and perturbation methods to
solve the linearized Young–Laplace equation, prescribing zero
contact angle at the lobe's free boundary. Conditions on
δ, the fluid volume a3V and the
tube length aL are identified separating axially uniform
lobes (which are stable for low V/(δL) or
small L), wavy lobes (some with a solitary structure) and
localized fluid droplets (which exist for sufficiently large
V/δ and L). Hysteresis is demonstrated
between multiple equilibria, the topology of which can change
dramatically as parameters are varied. The application of these
results to lung airways is discussed.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
56 articles.
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