On the response of neutrally stable flows to oscillatory forcing with application to liquid sheets
Colin M. Huber, Nathaniel S. Barlow, Steven J. Weinstein

TL;DR
This paper investigates how neutrally stable thin liquid sheets respond to oscillatory disturbances, revealing distinct behaviors from unstable systems and providing insights into the magnitude and spatial extent of the response.
Contribution
It introduces long-time asymptotic analysis for signaling in neutrally stable flows, specifically for varicose waves in liquid sheets, highlighting differences from unstable flow responses.
Findings
Signaling response varies significantly in neutrally stable flows.
Critical velocities partition the response into distinct regions.
Oscillatory response amplitudes depend on location and flow parameters.
Abstract
Industrial coating processes create thin liquid films with tight thickness tolerances, and thus models that predict the response to inevitable disturbances are essential. The mathematical modeling complexities are reduced through linearization as even small thickness variations in films can render a product unsalable. The signaling problem, considered in this paper, is perhaps the simplest model that incorporates the effects of repetitive (oscillatory) disturbances that are initiated, for example, by room vibrations and pump drives. In prior work, Gordillo and P\'erez (Phys. Fluids 14, 2002) examined the structure of the signaling response for linear operators that admit exponentially growing or damped solutions, i.e., the medium is classified as unstable or stable via classical stability analysis. The signaling problem admits two portions of the solution, the transient behavior due to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFluid Dynamics and Thin Films · Rheology and Fluid Dynamics Studies · Solidification and crystal growth phenomena
