Abstract
In this work, the linear stability analysis of the viscoelastic Taylor-Couette flow against non-axisymmetric disturbances is investigated. A pseudospectrally generated, generalized algebraic eigenvalue problem is constructed from the linearized set of the three-dimensional governing equations around the steady-state azimuthal solution. Numerical evaluation of the critical eigenvalues shows that for an upper-convected Maxwell model and for the specific set of geometric and kinematic parameters examined in this work, the azimuthal Couette (base) flow becomes unstable against non-axisymmetric time periodic disturbances before it does so for axisymmetric ones, provided the elasticity number ϵ ( De/ Re) is larger than some non-zero but small value (ϵ⪢ 0.01). In addition, as ϵ increases, different families of eigensolutions become responsible for the onset of instability. In particular, the azimuthal wavenumber of the critical eigensolution has been found to change from 1 to 2 to 3 and then back to 2 as ϵ increases from 0.01 to infinity (inertialess flow). In an analogous fashion to the axisymmetric viscoelastic Taylor-Couette flow, two possible patterns of time-dependent solutions (limit cycles) can emerge after the onset of instability: ribbons and spirals, corresponding to azimuthal and traveling waves, respectively. These patterns are dictated solely by the symmetry of the primary flow and have already been observed in conjunction with experiments involving Newtonian fluids but with the two cylinders counter-rotatng instead of co-rotating as considered here. Inclusion of a non-zero solvent viscosity (Oldroyd-B model) has been found to affect the results quantitatively but not qualitatively. These theoretical predictions are of particular importance for the interpretation of the experimental data obtained in a Taylor-Couette flow using highly elastic viscoelastic fluids.
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