Abstract

The nonlinear stability of viscous, immiscible multilayer flows in plane channels driven both by a pressure gradient and gravity is studied. Three fluid phases are present with two interfaces. Weakly nonlinear models of coupled evolution equations for the interfacial positions are derived and studied for inertialess, stably stratified flows in channels at small inclination angles. Interfacial tension is demoted and high-wavenumber stabilisation enters due to density stratification through second-order dissipation terms rather than the fourth-order ones found for strong interfacial tension. An asymptotic analysis is carried out to demonstrate how these models arise. The governing equations are $2\times 2$ systems of second-order semi-linear parabolic partial differential equations (PDEs) that can exhibit inertialess instabilities due to interaction between the interfaces. Mathematically this takes place due to a transition of the nonlinear flux function from hyperbolic to elliptic behaviour. The concept of hyperbolic invariant regions, found in nonlinear parabolic systems, is used to analyse this inertialess mechanism and to derive a transition criterion to predict the large-time nonlinear state of the system. The criterion is shown to predict nonlinear stability or instability of flows that are stable initially, i.e. the initial nonlinear fluxes are hyperbolic. Stability requires the hyperbolicity to persist at large times, whereas instability sets in when ellipticity is encountered as the system evolves. In the former case the solution decays asymptotically to its uniform base state, while in the latter case nonlinear travelling waves can emerge that could not be predicted by a linear stability analysis. The nonlinear analysis predicts threshold initial disturbances above which instability emerges.

Highlights

  • We investigated the problem of a three-layer flow inside a slightly inclined channel

  • The flow is driven by a pressure gradient and gravity, and the fluid layers have different viscosities and densities, the latter having values that provide stably stratified flows

  • Numerical experiments and nonlinear analysis of these models suggest that multilayer flows can exhibit transitional inertialess instabilities during their evolution

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Summary

Introduction

Stratified multilayer plane channel flows involving more than one interface emerge in a large number of industrial applications and exhibit unique nonlinear behaviour. Such geometrically complex flows raise physical and mathematical issues that are not encountered in two-fluid single-interface channel flows, which have been studied extensively. By considering the initial value problem of mixed hyperbolic–elliptic systems and starting with smooth initial conditions that ensure the systems are everywhere hyperbolic (i.e. the Jacobian of the flux function possesses real eigenvalues), these systems may remain hyperbolic throughout their evolution or transition to ellipticity (i.e. develop complex conjugate eigenvalues) This phenomenon has been encountered in different fluid applications – (Bürger et al 2002; Jackson & Blunt 2002; Talon et al 2004; Chumakova et al 2009; Boonkasame & Milewski 2012) – and has raised concern regarding the physical relevance of the mathematical models. We stress that the deep understanding and prediction of the behaviour of such complex flows demands the departure from well-established linear theories (albeit sufficient in two-layer flows) and the development of nonlinear methods

Formulation and mathematical models
Weakly nonlinear dynamics
Nonlinear stability theory for multilayer flows
Conclusions
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