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Liquid films falling down a vertical fiber: modeling, simulations and experiments

Authors :
Ruan, Y.
Nadim, A.
Duvvoori, L.
Chugunova, M.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

We present a control-volume approach for deriving a simplified model for the gravity-driven flow of an axisymmetric liquid film along a vertical fiber. The model accounts for gravitational, viscous, inertial and surface tension effects and results in a pair of coupled one-dimensional nonlinear partial differential equations for the film profile and average downward velocity as functions of time and axial distance along the fiber. Two versions of the model are obtained, one assuming a plug-flow velocity profile and a constant thin boundary layer thickness to model the drag force on the fluid, the other approximating the drag using the fully-developed laminar velocity profile for a locally uniform film. A linear stability analysis shows both models to be unstable to long waves or short wavenumbers, with a specific wavenumber in that range having a maximal growth rate. Numerical simulations confirm this instability and lead to nonlinear periodic traveling wave solutions which can be thought of as chains of identical droplets falling down the fiber. Physical experiments are also carried out on such a system using safflower oil as the working liquid and a taut fishing line as the fiber. A machine learning scheme is used to find the best set of parameters in the laminar flow model to match the experimental results to the simulations. Good agreement is found between the two, with parameter values that are quite close to their original estimates based on the approximate values of the physical parameters.

Subjects

Subjects :
Physics - Fluid Dynamics

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2104.05761
Document Type :
Working Paper