Abstract

The lifting Hele-Shaw cell flow commonly involves the stretching of a viscous oil droplet surrounded by air, in the confined space between two parallel plates. As the upper plate is lifted, viscous fingering instabilities emerge at the air-oil interface. Such an interfacial instability phenomenon is widely observed in numerous technological and industrial applications, being quite difficult to control. Motivated by the recent interest in controlling and stabilizing the Saffman-Taylor instability in lifting Hele-Shaw flows, we propose an alternative way to restrain the development of interfacial disturbances in this gap-variable system. Our method modifies the traditional plate-lifting flow arrangement by introducing a finite fluid annulus layer encircling the central oil droplet, and separating it from the air. A second-order, perturbative mode-coupling approach is employed to analyze morphological and stability behaviors in this three-fluid, two-interface, doubly connected system. Our findings indicate that the intermediate fluid ring can significantly stabilize the interface of the central oil droplet. We show that the effectiveness of this stabilization protocol relies on the appropriate choice of the ring's viscosity and thickness. Furthermore, we calculate the adhesion force required to detach the plates, and find that it does not change significantly with the addition of the fluid envelope as long as it is sufficiently thin. Finally, we detect no distinction in the adhesion force computed for stable or unstable annular interfaces, indicating that the presence of fingering at the ring's boundaries has a negligible effect on the adhesion force.

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