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Thermocapillary instability and wave formation on a film falling down a uniformly heated plane

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 September 2003

S. KALLIADASIS
Affiliation:
Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Leeds, Leeds, LS2 9JT, UK
E. A. DEMEKHIN
Affiliation:
Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46556, USA
C. RUYER-QUIL
Affiliation:
Laboratoire FAST, UMR CNRS 7608, Université Paris VI et Paris XI, Campus universitaire, 91405 Orsay, France
M. G. VELARDE
Affiliation:
Instituto Pluridisciplinar, Universidad Complutense, Paseo Juan XXIII, No. 1 28040-Madrid, Spain

Abstract

We consider a thin layer of a viscous fluid flowing down a uniformly heated planar wall. The heating generates a temperature distribution on the free surface which in turn induces surface tension gradients. We model this thermocapillary flow by using the Shkadov integral-boundary-layer (IBL) approximation of the Navier–Stokes/energy equations and associated free-surface boundary conditions. Our linear stability analysis of the flat-film solution is in good agreement with the Goussis & Kelly (1991) stability results from the Orr–Sommerfeld eigenvalue problem of the full Navier–Stokes/energy equations. We numerically construct nonlinear solutions of the solitary wave type for the IBL approximation and the Benney-type equation developed by Joo et al. (1991) using the usual long-wave approximation. The two approaches give similar solitary wave solutions up to an $O(1)$ Reynolds number above which the solitary wave solution branch obtained by the Joo et al. equation is unrealistic, with branch multiplicity and limit points. The IBL approximation on the other hand has no limit points and predicts the existence of solitary waves for all Reynolds numbers. Finally, in the region of small film thicknesses where the Marangoni forces dominate inertia forces, our IBL system reduces to a single equation for the film thickness that contains only one parameter. When this parameter tends to zero, both the solitary wave speed and the maximum amplitude tend to infinity.

Type
Papers
Copyright
© 2003 Cambridge University Press

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