# Linear instability of shear thinning pressure driven channel flow

**Authors:** Hugh J. Barlow, Ewan J. Hemingway, Andrew Clarke, Suzanne M. Fielding

arXiv: 1903.01910 · 2019-08-09

## TL;DR

This paper investigates the linear instability of shear thinning viscoelastic channel flows using three constitutive models, revealing that instability occurs when shear thinning exceeds a critical level and is driven by normal stress variations.

## Contribution

It provides a comparative theoretical analysis of flow instability mechanisms across three widely used viscoelastic models, highlighting the role of shear thinning and normal stress gradients.

## Key findings

- Instability occurs when shear thinning exceeds a critical logarithmic slope.
- Critical pressure drop depends on shear thinning degree and normal stress derivative.
- Destabilization involves a quasi-interface in some models, but the mechanism's universality remains uncertain.

## Abstract

We study theoretically pressure driven planar channel flow of shear thinning viscoelastic fluids. Combining linear stability analysis and full nonlinear simulation, we study the instability of an initially one-dimensional base state to the growth of two-dimensional perturbations with wavevector in the flow direction. We do so within three widely used constitutive models: the microscopically motivated Rolie-Poly model, and the phenomenological Johnson-Segalman and White-Metzner models. In each model, we find instability when the degree of shear thinning exceeds some level characterised by the logarithmic slope of the flow curve at its shallowest point. Specifically, we find instability for $n<n^*$, with $n^*\approx 0.21, 0.11$ and $0.30$ in the Rolie-Poly, Johnson-Segalman and White-Metzner models respectively. Within each model, we show that the critical pressure drop for the onset of instability obeys a criterion expressed in terms of this degree of shear thinning, $n$, together with the derivative of the first normal stress with respect to shear stress. Both shear thinning and rapid variations in first normal stress across the channel are therefore key ingredients driving the instability. In the Rolie-Poly and Johnson-Segalman models, the underlying mechanism appears to involve the destabilisation of a quasi-interface that exists in each half of the channel, across which the normal stress varies rapidly. In the White-Metzner model, no such quasi-interface exists, but the criterion for instability nonetheless appears to follow the same form as in the Rolie-Poly and Johnson-Segalman models. This presents an outstanding puzzle concerning any possibly generic nature of the instability mechanism. We finally make some briefly comments on the Giesekus model, which is rather different in its predictions from the other three.

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

38 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1903.01910/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1903.01910