Generalized Stability Analysis of Capillary Flow in Slender V-Grooves
ORAL
Abstract
Spontaneous capillary flow, an especially rapid process in slender open microchannels resembling V-grooves, is of significant importance to many applications requiring passive robust flow control. Many types of biomedical devices for point-of-care use in developing countries are being designed around this principle. Important fundamental work by Romero and Yost (1996) and Weislogel(1996) elucidated the behavior of Newtonian films in slender V-grooves driven to flow by the streamwise change in capillary pressure due to the change in radius of curvature of the circular arc describing the interface of wetting or non-wetting fluids. Self-similar solutions describing Washburn type dynamics were found but other solutions are possible. Here we extend the Romero and Yost model to include a variety of inlet and outlet boundary conditions and examine the transient growth and generalized stability of perturbations to steady state and self-similar flows. In total, the results support decades of experimental work which has found this method of flow control to be especially reliable, robust and self-healing.
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Presenters
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Nicholas White
Applied Physics, California Institute of Technology
Authors
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Nicholas White
Applied Physics, California Institute of Technology
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Sandra Troian
California Institute of Technology, Caltech, Applied Physics, California Institute of Technology