Polymeric diffusive instability (PDI) leading to viscoelastic chaos in planar wall-bounded flows
ORAL
Abstract
Elastic turbulence is a chaotic flow state observed in dilute polymer solutions in the absence of inertia. It was discovered experimentally in circular geometries and has long been thought to require a finite amplitude perturbation in wall-bounded parallel flows. In this talk we will discuss, within the commonly-used FENE-P model, that a self-sustaining chaotic state can be initiated via a linear instability in a simple inertialess shear flow caused by the presence of small but non-zero diffusivity of the polymer stress. Numerical simulations show that the instability leads to a three-dimensional self-sustaining chaotic state. We will discuss how this instability might present a generic pathway to experimentally observed viscoelastic chaotic states, i.e. elastic turbulence and elasto-inertial turbulence.
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Presenters
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Miguel Beneitez
DAMTP, University of Cambridge
Authors
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Miguel Beneitez
DAMTP, University of Cambridge
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Jacob Page
University of Edinburgh
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Yves C Dubief
University of Vermont
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Rich R Kerswell
Univ of Cambridge, DAMTP, University of Cambridge