Inertio-elastic instabilities in channel flow

ORAL

Abstract

The addition of small amounts of long-chain polymers to a Newtonian solvent can lead to frictional drag reduction in inertial shear flows. The interplay of viscoelasticity and inertia in a dilute polymer solution results in the emergence of inertio-elastic instabilities. The nonlinear evolution of these instabilities engenders a state of turbulence with significantly different spatiotemporal features compared to Newtonian counterpart, termed elasto-inertial turbulence (EIT). Recent numerical simulations suggest the emergence of two distinct instabilities as pathways to EIT. The first route is an inertio-elastic wall-mode instability that appears as amplified Tollmien-Schlichting waves, while the second route is an elastic center-mode instability that continues to exist at infinitesimally small levels of inertia. Despite these advancements, there is a lack of experimental work on viscoelastic channel flows. We explore the emergence and evolution of these elastic and inertio-elastic instabilities in a channel flow using schlieren imaging. The spatio-temporal structures of a viscoelastic channel flow are visualized at the centerline and in proximity to the wall in a Lagrangian manner and are compared to the turbulent structures present in the corresponding Newtonian channel flow.

*This work was supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) Grant No. CBET-2027870 to MIT and CBET-2027875 to JHU. We acknowledge the support of the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC), funding reference number CGSD2-532512-2019. Cette recherche a été financée par le Conseil de recherches en sciences naturelles et en génie du Canada (CRSNG), numéro de référence CGSD2-532512-2019.

Presenters

  • Sami Yamanidouzisorkhabi

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT

Authors

  • Sami Yamanidouzisorkhabi

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT
  • Yashasvi Raj

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT
  • Tamer A Zaki

    • Johns Hopkins University
  • Gareth H McKinley

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT
  • Irmgard Bischofberger

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT
    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology MI
    • MIT