
TL;DR
This paper introduces a new model incorporating viscous strength to explain water's failure and transition to turbulence, challenging traditional assumptions and aligning with recent experimental findings.
Contribution
It develops a generalized Navier-Stokes model including fluid failure, providing insights into turbulence onset and water's shear stress limits.
Findings
Maximum shear stress water can sustain is about 1 Pascal.
Lateral perturbations can destabilize laminar flow.
Model explains delay in turbulence transition with polymer additives.
Abstract
In the laminar mode interactions among molecules generate friction between layers of water that slide with respect to each other. This friction triggers the shear stress, which is traditionally presumed to be linearly proportional to the velocity gradient. The proportionality coefficient characterizes the viscosity of water. Remarkably, the standard Navier-Stokes model surmises that materials never fail - the transition to turbulence can only be triggered by some kinematic instability of the flow. This premise is probably the reason why the Navier-Stokes theory fails to explain the so-called subcritical transition to turbulence with the help of the linear instability analysis. When linear instability analysis fails, nonlinear instability analysis is often resorted to, but, despite the occasional uses of this approach, it is intrinsically biased to require finite flow perturbations which…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRheology and Fluid Dynamics Studies · Granular flow and fluidized beds · Fluid Dynamics and Turbulent Flows
