Issue 26, 2022

Upstream wall vortices in viscoelastic flow past a cylinder

Abstract

We report a novel inertia-less, elastic flow instability for a viscoelastic, shear-thinning wormlike micellar solution flowing past a microcylinder in a channel with blockage ratio BR = 2R/W = 0.5 and aspect ratio α = H/W ≈ 5, where R ≈ 100 μm is the cylinder radius, W is the channel width, and H is the channel height. The instability manifests upstream of the cylinder and changes form with increasing Weissenberg number over the range 0.5 ≲ Wi = /R ≲ 900, where U is the average flow velocity and λ is the terminal relaxation time of the fluid. Beyond a first critical Wi, the instability begins as a bending of the streamlines near the upstream pole of the cylinder that breaks the symmetry of the flow. Beyond a second critical Wi, small, time-steady, and approximately symmetric wall-attached vortices form upstream of the cylinder. Beyond a third critical Wi, the flow becomes time dependent and pulses with a characteristic frequency commensurate with the breakage timescale of the wormlike micelles. This is accompanied by a breaking of the symmetry of the wall-attached vortices, where one vortex becomes considerably larger than the other. Finally, beyond a fourth critical Wi, a vortex forms attached to the upstream pole of the cylinder whose length fluctuates in time. The flow is highly time dependent, and the cylinder-attached vortex and wall-attached vortices compete dynamically for space and time in the channel. Our results add to the rapidly growing understanding of viscoelastic flow instabilities in microfluidic geometries.

Graphical abstract: Upstream wall vortices in viscoelastic flow past a cylinder

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
02 Apr 2022
Accepted
10 Jun 2022
First published
13 Jun 2022
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Soft Matter, 2022,18, 4868-4880

Upstream wall vortices in viscoelastic flow past a cylinder

C. C. Hopkins, S. J. Haward and A. Q. Shen, Soft Matter, 2022, 18, 4868 DOI: 10.1039/D2SM00418F

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