Author:
HOSOI A. E.,BUSH JOHN W. M.
Abstract
We consider flow in a thin film generated by partially submerging an inclined rigid
plate in a reservoir of ethanol– or methanol–water solution and wetting its surface.
Evaporation leads to concentration and surface tension gradients that drive flow up
the plate. An experimental study indicates that the climbing film is subject to two
distinct instabilities. The first is a convective instability characterized by flattened
convection rolls aligned in the direction of flow and accompanied by free-surface
deformations; in the meniscus region, this instability gives rise to pronounced ridge
structures aligned with the mean flow. The second instability, evident when the plate
is nearly vertical, takes the form of transverse surface waves propagating up the plate.We demonstrate that the observed longitudinal rolls are driven by the combined
influence of surface deformations and alcohol concentration gradients. Guided by the
observation that the rolls are flattened, we develop a quasi-two-dimensional theoretical
model for the instability of the film, based on lubrication theory, which includes the
effects of gravity, capillarity and Marangoni stresses at the surface. We develop
stability criteria for the film which are in qualitative agreement with our experimental
observations. Our analysis yields an equation for the shape of the interface which is
solved numerically and reproduces the salient features of the observed flows, including
the slow lateral drift and merging of the ridges.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
79 articles.
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