Purely elastic shear flow instabilities: linear stability, coherent states and direct numerical simulations
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Abstract
Recently, a new kind of turbulence has been discovered in the flow of concentrated
polymer melts and solutions. These flows, known as purely elastic flows, become
unstable when the elastic forces are stronger than the viscous forces. This contrasts with
Newtonian turbulence, a more familiar regime where the fluid inertia dominates. While
there is little understanding of purely elastic turbulence, there is a well-established
dynamical systems approach to the transition from laminar flow to Newtonian
turbulence. In this project, I apply this approach to purely elastic flows.
Laminar flows are characterised by ordered, locally-parallel streamlines of fluid, with
only diffusive mixing perpendicular to the flow direction. In contrast, turbulent flows
are in a state of continuous instability: tiny differences in the location of fluid elements
upstream make a large difference to their later locations downstream. The emerging
understanding of the transition from a laminar to turbulent flow is in terms of exact
coherent structures (ECS) — patterns of the flow that occur near to the transition to
turbulence.
The problem I address in this thesis is how to predict when a purely elastic flow
will become unstable and when it will transition to turbulence. I consider a variety of
flows and examine the purely elastic instabilities that arise. This prepares the ground
for the identification of a three-dimensional steady state solution to the equations,
corresponding to an exact coherent structure.
I have organised my research primarily around obtaining a purely elastic exact
coherent structure, however, solving this problem requires a very accurate prediction of
the exact solution to the equations of motion. In Chapter 2 I start from a Newtonian
ECS (travelling wave solutions in two-dimensional flow) and attempt to connect it to
the purely elastic regime. Although I found no such connection, the results corroborate
other evidence on the effect of elasticity on travelling waves in Poiseuille flow.
The Newtonian plane Couette ECS is sustained by the Kelvin-Helmholtz instability.
I discover a purely elastic counterpart of this mechanism in Chapter 3, and explore the
non-linear evolution of this instability in Chapter 4. In Chapter 5 I turn to a slightly
different problem, a (previously unexplained) instability in a purely elastic oscillatory
shear flow. My numerical analysis supports the experimental evidence for instability
of this flow, and relates it to the instability described in Chapter 3. In Chapter 6 I
discover a self-sustaining flow, and discuss how it may lead to a purely elastic 3D exact
coherent structure.
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