Evidence of an inertialess Kapitza instability due to viscosity stratification
Shravya Gundavarapu, Darish Jeswin Dhas, Anubhab Roy

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that viscosity stratification can induce a surface-mode instability in falling films without inertia, extending the understanding of scalar-driven, inertialess flow instabilities.
Contribution
It reveals a new inertialess instability mechanism driven by viscosity stratification, analyzed through asymptotics and spectral methods.
Findings
Viscosity stratification destabilizes the surface mode at zero inertia.
Increasing stratification widens the unstable wavenumber range and raises growth rates.
The instability mechanism involves a phase shift between vorticity and interface displacement.
Abstract
The classical Kapitza instability of a gravity-driven falling film requires finite inertia to operate. We show that a surface-mode instability can arise in the complete absence of inertia when the film possesses a continuous viscosity stratification, a feature relevant to particle-laden films with shear-induced migration, thermally stratified coatings, and concentration-graded flows. The viscosity field, prescribed as a linear profile across the film thickness, evolves through an advection-diffusion equation characterized by a Pclet number. Using long-wave asymptotics and Chebyshev spectral computations, we solve the coupled eigenvalue problem for the perturbation streamfunction and viscosity fields and demonstrate that viscosity stratification destabilizes the surface mode in the zero-inertia (Stokes) limit. The instability is confined to a finite window of Pclet numbers.…
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