Abstract

Viscous fingering in radial Hele-Shaw cells is markedly characterized by the occurrence of fingertip splitting, where growing fingered structures bifurcate at their tips, via a tip-doubling process. A much less studied pattern-forming phenomenon, which is also detected in experiments, is the development of fingertip tripling, where a finger divides into three. We investigate the problem theoretically, and employ a third-order perturbative mode-coupling scheme seeking to detect the onset of tip-tripling instabilities. Contrary to most existing theoretical studies of the viscous fingering instability, our theoretical description accounts for the effects of viscous normal stresses at the fluid-fluid interface. We show that accounting for such stresses allows one to capture the emergence of tip-tripling events at weakly nonlinear stages of the flow. Sensitivity of fingertip-tripling events to changes in the capillary number and in the viscosity contrast is also examined.

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