Controlling Viscous Fingering Instabilities of Complex Fluids
Alban Pouplard, Peichun Amy Tsai

TL;DR
This paper investigates controlling viscous fingering instabilities in complex fluids, specifically power-law fluids with yield stress, using a tapered cell through theoretical and experimental methods, addressing a longstanding challenge in fluid dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach to control viscous fingering in complex fluids with yield stress using a tapered cell, expanding beyond simple fluids.
Findings
Successful theoretical modeling of fingering control
Experimental validation of control strategy
Reduction of fingering patterns in complex fluids
Abstract
The process of one fluid pushing another is universally common while involving complex interfacial instabilities. Particularly, occurring in a myriad of natural and industrial processes, wavy fingering patterns frequently emerge when a less viscous fluid pushes another more viscous one, such as water invading oil, in a porous medium. Such finger-shaped interfaces producing partial displacement significantly affect the efficiency of numerous applications, for example, chromatography, printing devices, coating flows, oil-well cementing, as well as large-scale technologies of groundwater and enhanced oil recovery (EOR). This classical viscous fingering instability is notoriously difficult to control because the two fluids' viscosity or mobility ratio is often fixed and yet the predominant drive of the instability. Although some strategies have been recently revealed for simple fluids of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFluid Dynamics and Thin Films · Characterization and Applications of Magnetic Nanoparticles · Pickering emulsions and particle stabilization
