Elasto-inertial instabilities in the merging flow of viscoelastic fluids

Abstract

Many engineering and natural phenomena involve the merging of two fluid streams through a T-junction. Previous studies of such merging flows have been focused primarily upon Newtonian fluids. We observed in our recent experiment with five different polymer solutions a direct change from an undisturbed to either a steady vortical or unsteady three-dimensional flow at the T-junction with increasing inertia. The transition state(s) in between these two types of merging flow patterns is, however, yet to be known. We present here a systematic experimental study of the merging flow of polyethylene oxide (PEO) solutions with varying polymer concentrations and molecular weights. Two new paths of flow development are identified with the increase of Reynolds number: one is the transition in very weakly viscoelastic fluids first to steady vortical flow and then to a juxtaposition state with an unsteady elastic eddy zone in the middle and a steady inertial vortex on each side, and the other is the transition in weakly viscoelastic fluids first to a steady vortical and/or a juxtaposition state and then to a fully unsteady flow. Interestingly, the threshold Reynolds number for the onset of elastic instabilities in the merging flow is not a monotonic function of the elasticity number, but instead follows a power-law dependence on the polymer concentration relative to its overlap value. Such a dependence turns out qualitatively consistent with the prediction of the McKinley-Pakdel criterion.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
17 Jun 2024
Accepted
15 Jul 2024
First published
16 Jul 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Soft Matter, 2024, Accepted Manuscript

Elasto-inertial instabilities in the merging flow of viscoelastic fluids

M. Raihan, N. Kim, Y. Song and X. Xuan, Soft Matter, 2024, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D4SM00743C

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