Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-t5pn6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-23T07:52:56.164Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

On the Kapitza instability and the generation of capillary waves

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 January 2016

Georg F. Dietze*
Affiliation:
Laboratoire FAST, Univ. Paris-Sud, CNRS, Université Paris-Saclay, F-91405, Orsay, France
*
Email address for correspondence: dietze@fast.u-psud.fr

Abstract

We revisit the classical problem of a liquid film falling along a vertical wall due to the action of gravity, i.e. the Kapitza paradigm (Kapitza, Zh. Eksp. Teor. Fiz., vol. 18, 1948, pp. 3–28). The free surface of such a flow is typically deformed into a train of solitary pulses that consists of large asymmetric wave humps preceded by small precursory ripples, designated as ‘capillary waves’. We set out to answer four fundamental questions. (i) By what mechanism do the precursory ripples form? (ii) How can they travel at the same celerity as the large-amplitude main humps? (iii) Why are they designated as ‘capillary waves’? (iv) What determines their wavelength and number and why do they attenuate in space? Asymptotic expansion as well as direct numerical simulations and calculations with a low-dimensional integral boundary-layer model have yielded the following conclusions. (i) Precursory ripples form due to an inertia-based mechanism at the foot of the leading front of the main humps, where the local free-surface curvature is large. (ii) The celerity of capillary waves is matched to that of the large humps due to the action of surface tension, which speeds up the former and slows down the latter. (iii) They are justly designated as ‘capillary waves’ because their wavelength is systematically shorter than the visco-capillary cutoff wavelength of the Kapitza instability. Due to a nonlinear effect, namely that their celerity decreases with decreasing amplitude, they nonetheless attain/maintain a finite amplitude because of being continuously compressed by the pursuing large humps. (iv) The number and degree of compression of capillary waves is governed by the amplitude of the main wave humps as well as the Kapitza number. Large-amplitude main humps travel fast and strongly compress the capillary waves in order for these to speed up sufficiently. Also, the more pronounced the first capillary wave becomes, the more (spatially attenuating) capillary waves are needed to allow a smooth transition to the back of the next main hump. These effects are amplified by decreasing the Kapitza number, whereby, at very small values, streamwise viscous diffusion increasingly attenuates the amplitude of the capillary waves.

Type
Papers
Copyright
© 2016 Cambridge University Press 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Alekseenko, S. V., Nakoryakov, V. E. & Pokusaev, B. G. 1994 Wave Flow of Liquid Films. Begell House.Google Scholar
Benney, D. J. 1966 Long waves on liquid films. J. Math. Phys. 45, 150155.Google Scholar
Brooke Benjamin, T. 1957 Wave formation in laminar flow down an inclined plane. J. Fluid Mech. 2, 554574.Google Scholar
Chang, H. C. 1994 Wave evolution on a falling film. Annu. Rev. Fluid Mech. 26, 103136.Google Scholar
Chang, H. C. & Demekhin, E. A. 2002 Complex Wave Dynamics on Thin Films, Studies in Interface Science, vol. 14. Elsevier.Google Scholar
Chang, H. C., Demekhin, E. A., Kalaidin, E. & Ye, Y. 1996 Coarsening dynamics of falling-film solitary waves. Phys. Rev. E 54 (2), 14671477.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Chang, H. C., Demekhin, E. A. & Kopelevich, D. I. 1993 Nonlinear evolution of waves on a vertically falling film. J. Fluid Mech. 250, 433480.Google Scholar
Craster, R. V. & Matar, O. K. 2009 Dynamics and stability of thin liquid films. Rev. Mod. Phys. 81, 11311198.Google Scholar
Demekhin, E. A., Kalaidin, E. N., Kalliadasis, S. & Vlaskin, S. Yu. 2007a Three-dimensional localized coherent structures of surface turbulence. I. Scenarios of two-dimensional-three-dimensional transition. Phys. Fluids 19, 114103.Google Scholar
Demekhin, E. A., Kalaidin, E. N., Kalliadasis, S. & Vlaskin, S. Yu. 2007b Three-dimensional localized coherent structures of surface turbulence. II. Solitons. Phys. Fluids 19, 114104.Google Scholar
Demekhin, E. A., Kalaidin, E. N., Kalliadasis, S. & Vlaskin, S. Yu. 2010 Three-dimensional localized coherent structures of surface turbulence: model validation with experiments and further computations. Phys. Rev. E 82, 036322.Google Scholar
Dietze, G. F.2010 Flow separation in falling liquid films. PhD thesis, RWTH Aachen University.Google Scholar
Dietze, G. F., Al-Sibai, F. & Kneer, R. 2009 Experimental study of flow separation in laminar falling liquid films. J. Fluid Mech. 637, 73104.Google Scholar
Dietze, G. F., Leefken, A. & Kneer, R. 2008 Investigation of the backflow phenomenon in falling liquid films. J. Fluid Mech. 595, 435459.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dietze, G. F., Rohlfs, W., Nährich, K., Kneer, R. & Scheid, B. 2014 Three-dimensional flow structures in laminar falling liquid films. J. Fluid Mech. 743, 75123.Google Scholar
Doedel, E. J.2007 AUTO-07p: continuation and bifurcation software for ordinary differential equations. Concordia University, Montreal, Canada; available at http://cmvl.cs.concordia.ca/auto.Google Scholar
Doro, E. O. & Aidun, C. 2013 Interfacial waves and the dynamics of backflow in falling liquid films. J. Fluid Mech. 726, 261284.Google Scholar
Floryan, J. M., Davis, S. H. & Kelly, R. E. 1987 Instabilities of a liquid film flowing down a slightly inclined plane. Phys. Fluids 30 (4), 983989.Google Scholar
Gao, D., Morley, N. B. & Dhir, V. 2003 Numerical simulation of wavy falling film flow using VOF method. J. Comput. Phys. 192, 624642.Google Scholar
Gjevik, B. 1970 Occurence of finite-amplitude surface waves on falling liquid films. Phys. Fluids 13 (8), 19181925.Google Scholar
Joo, S. W. & Davis, S. H. 1992 Instabilities of three-dimensional viscous falling films. J. Fluid Mech. 242, 529547.Google Scholar
Kalliadasis, S., Ruyer-Quil, C., Scheid, B. & Velarde, M. G. 2012 Falling Liquid Films, Applied Mathematical Sciences, vol. 176. Springer.Google Scholar
Kapitza, P. L. 1948 Wave flow of thin layer of viscous fluid (in Russian). Zh. Eksp. Teor. Fiz. 18 (1), 328.Google Scholar
Kofman, N., Mergui, S. & Ruyer-Qui, C. 2014 Three-dimensional instabilities of quasi-solitary waves in a falling liquid film. J. Fluid Mech. 757, 854887.Google Scholar
Lel, V. V., Al-Sibai, F., Leefken, A. & Renz, U. 2005 Local thickness and wave velocity measurement of wavy films with a chromatic confocal imaging method and a fluorescence intensity technique. Exp. Fluids 39 (5), 856864.Google Scholar
Lin, S. P. 1974 Finite amplitude side-band stability of a viscous film. J. Fluid Mech. 63, 417429.Google Scholar
Liu, J. & Gollub, J. P. 1994 Solitary wave dynamics of film flows. Phys. Fluids 6 (5), 17021712.Google Scholar
Liu, J., Paul, J. D. & Gollub, J. P. 1993 Measurements of the primary instabilities of film flows. J. Fluid Mech. 250, 69101.Google Scholar
Malamataris, N. A. & Balakotaiah, V. 2008 Flow structure underneath the large amplitude waves of a vertically falling film. AIChE J. 54 (7), 17251740.Google Scholar
Malamataris, N. A., Vlachogiannis, M. & Bontozoglou, V. 2002 Solitary waves on inclined films: flow structure and binary interactions. Phys. Fluids 14 (3), 10821094.Google Scholar
Miyara, A. 1999 Numerical analysis on flow dynamics and heat transfer of falling liquid films with interfacial waves. Heat Mass Transfer 35, 298306.Google Scholar
Moisy, F. & Rabaud, M. 2014 Mach-like capillary-gravity wakes. Phys. Rev. E 90, 023009.Google Scholar
Nosoko, T. & Miyara, A. 2004 The evolution and subsequent dynamics of waves on a vertically falling liquid film. Phys. Fluids 16 (4), 11181126.Google Scholar
Oron, A., Davis, S. H. & Bankoff, S. G. 1997 Long-scale evolution of thin liquid films. Rev. Mod. Phys. 69 (3), 931980.Google Scholar
Park, C. D. & Nosoko, T. 2003 Three-dimensional wave dynamics on a falling film and associated mass transfer. AIChE J. 49 (11), 27152727.Google Scholar
Popinet, S. 2009 An accurate adaptive solver for surface-tension-driven interfacial flows. J. Comput. Phys. 228, 58385866.Google Scholar
Pradas, M., Kalliadasis, S., Nguyen, P.-K. & Bontozoglou, V. 2013 Bound-state formation in interfacial turbulence: direct numerical simulations and theory. J. Fluid Mech. 716, R2.Google Scholar
Pradas, M., Tseluiko, D. & Kalliadasis, S. 2011 Rigorous coherent-structure theory for falling liquid films: viscous dispersion effects on bound-state formation and self-organization. Phys. Fluids 23, 044104.Google Scholar
Pumir, A., Manneville, P. & Pomeau, Y. 1983 On solitary waves running down an inclined plane. J. Fluid Mech. 135, 2750.Google Scholar
Ramaswamy, B., Chippada, S. & Joo, S. W. 1996 A full-scale numerical study of interfacial instabilities in thin-film flows. J. Fluid Mech. 325, 163194.Google Scholar
Raphaël, E. & de Gennes, P.-G. 1996 Capillary gravity waves caused by a moving disturbance: wave resistance. Phys. Rev. E 53, 34483455.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rohlfs, W. & Scheid, B. 2015 Phase diagram for the onset of circulating waves and flow reversal in inclined falling films. J. Fluid Mech. 763, 322351.Google Scholar
Ruyer-Quil, C. & Manneville, P. 1998 Modeling film flows down inclined planes. Eur. Phys. J. B 6 (2), 277292.Google Scholar
Ruyer-Quil, C. & Manneville, P. 2000 Improved modeling of flows down inclined planes. Eur. Phys. J. B 15 (2), 357369.Google Scholar
Salamon, T. R., Armstrong, R. C. & Brown, R. A. 1994 Traveling waves on vertical films: numerical analysis using the finite element method. Phys. Fluids 6, 22022220.Google Scholar
Shkadov, V. Ya. 1967 Wave flow regimes of a thin layer of viscous fluid subject to gravity. Fluid Dyn. 2 (1), 2934.Google Scholar
Tihon, J., Serifi, K., Argyriadi, K. & Bontozoglou, V. 2006 Solitary waves on inclined films: their characteristics and the effects on wall shear stress. Exp. Fluids 41, 7989.Google Scholar
Trifonov, Y. Y. 2008 Wavy film flow down a vertical plate: comparisons between the results of integral approaches and full-scale computations. J. Engng Thermophys. 17 (1), 3052.Google Scholar
Whitham, G. B. 1974 Linear and Nonlinear Waves. John Wiley & Sons.Google Scholar
Yih, C. S. 1963 Stability of liquid flow down an inclined plane. Phys. Fluids 6 (3), 321334.Google Scholar