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arxiv: 1601.03529 · v1 · pith:7PPYXJC4new · submitted 2016-01-14 · ⚛️ physics.flu-dyn · cond-mat.soft

Inverse Saffman-Taylor experiments with particles lead to capillarity driven fingering instabilities

classification ⚛️ physics.flu-dyn cond-mat.soft
keywords particlesfingeringinstabilityinversecapillarycasefluidinterface
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Using air to displace a viscous fluid contained in Hele-Shaw cell can create a fingering pattern at the interface between the fluids, if the capillary number exceeds a critical value. This Saffman-Taylor instability is revisited for the inverse case of a viscous fluid displacing air, when partially wettable hydrophilic particles are lying on the walls. Though the inverse case is otherwise stable, the presence of the particles results in a fingering instability at low capillary number. This capillary-driven instability is driven-by the integration of particles into the interface which results from the minimization of the interfacial energy. Both axisymmetric and rectangular geometries are considered in order to quantify this phenomenon.

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