Thermo-viscous instability of flow in a weakly heat-conducting channel
Federico Lanza, Gaute Linga, Fabian Barras, Eirik Grude Flekk{\o}y

TL;DR
This paper investigates the thermo-viscous instability in thin-gap flows of temperature-dependent fluids, revealing how heat transfer and viscosity contrast lead to fingering patterns through combined numerical and analytical methods.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of thermo-viscous fingering in the small Biot number regime, including linear stability and scaling laws for pattern formation.
Findings
Fingering instabilities occur within specific Péclet number and viscosity contrast ranges.
Derived analytical expressions for growth rate and wavenumber in high Péclet and viscosity contrast limits.
Numerical simulations confirm the theoretical predictions and elucidate pattern selection mechanisms.
Abstract
An instability may arise when a hot viscous fluid enters a thin gap and cools through heat transfer to a colder surrounding environment. Fluids whose viscosity increases strongly upon cooling create a positive feedback in which warmer regions flow faster and cool more slowly, leading to the formation of thermo-viscous "fingers". Here we investigate this mechanism in the long time, small Biot number regime, where cooling through the plates is weak but acts over sufficiently long times that the temperature becomes nearly uniform across the gap heat. This asymptotic limit enables a depth-averaged description that incorporates both thermal diffusion and hydrodynamic (Taylor) dispersion, allowing us to analyze the dependence of the instability on the P\'eclet number, viscosity contrast, and wall cooling rate. Using numerical simulations of temperature-dependent viscous flow in a Hele-Shaw…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFluid Dynamics and Thin Films · Theoretical and Computational Physics · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics
