The effect of pressure fluctuations on the shapes of thinning liquid curtains
Bridget M. Torsey, Steven J. Weinstein, David S. Ross, and Nathaniel, S. Barlow

TL;DR
This paper investigates how pressure fluctuations influence the shape of a thinning liquid curtain, analyzing the response under different flow regimes using a hyperbolic PDE model, revealing similar overall responses near critical flow conditions.
Contribution
The study provides a theoretical analysis of liquid curtain responses to pressure disturbances across subcritical and supercritical flow regimes, highlighting their similar behaviors near the critical Weber number.
Findings
Subcritical and supercritical curtains respond similarly to sinusoidal disturbances near W_{e_0} = 1.
Disturbance propagation speeds depend on the Weber number and flow conditions.
The curtain slope oscillates with amplitude related to the Weber number in subcritical flow.
Abstract
We consider the time-dependent response of a gravitationally-thinning inviscid liquid sheet (a coating curtain) leaving a vertical slot to sinusoidal ambient pressure disturbances. The theoretical investigation employs the hyperbolic partial differential equation developed by \cite{weinp1}. The response of the curtain is characterized by the slot Weber number, , where is the speed of the curtain at the slot, is the volumetric flow rate per unit width, is the surface tension, and is the fluid density. Flow disturbances travel along characteristics with speeds relative to the curtain of , where is the curtain speed at a distance downstream from the slot. When the flow is subcritical (), upstream traveling disturbances near the slot affect the curtain centerline, and the slope…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
