Finite wavelength surface-tension driven instabilities in soft solids, including instability in a cylindrical channel through an elastic solid
Chen Xuan, John Biggins

TL;DR
This paper analyzes surface-tension-driven instabilities in soft solids with cylindrical geometries, revealing finite wavelength instabilities in various configurations and demonstrating their potential to cause structural failure.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive linear stability analysis of Rayleigh-Plateau type instabilities in incompressible neo-Hookean solids across different cylindrical geometries, highlighting the prevalence of finite wavelength instabilities.
Findings
Finite wavelength instability in a solid cylinder at $ ext{γ} ext{≥} 6 ext{μ} R_0$
Infinite wavelength instability in a sealed cavity at $ ext{γ} ext{≥} 2 ext{μ} R_0$
Finite wavelength instability in a composite solid cylinder with $ ext{λ} ext{∝} R_0$
Abstract
We deploy linear stability analysis to find the threshold wavelength () and surface tension () of Rayleigh-Plateau type "peristaltic" instabilities in incompressible neo-Hookean solids in a range of cylindrical geometries with radius . First we consider a solid cylinder, and recover the well-known, infinite wavelength instability for , where is the solid's shear modulus. Second, we consider a volume-conserving (e.g.\ fluid filled and sealed) cylindrical cavity through an infinite solid, and demonstrate infinite wavelength instability for . Third, we consider a solid cylinder embedded in a different infinite solid, and find a finite wavelength instability with , at surface tension , where the constants depend on the two solids' modulus ratio. Finally, we consider an empty…
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