Abstract

A thin elastic membrane lying on a fluid substrate deviates from its flat geometry on lateral compression. The compressed membrane folds and wrinkles into many distinct morphologies. We study a magnetoelastic variant of such a problem where a viscous ferrofluid, surrounded by a nonmagnetic fluid, is subjected to a radial magnetic field in a Hele-Shaw cell. Elasticity comes into play when the fluids are brought into contact, and due to a chemical reaction, the interface separating them becomes a gel-like elastic layer. A perturbative linear stability theory is used to investigate how the combined action of magnetic and elastic forces can lead to the development of smooth, low-amplitude, sinusoidal wrinkles at the elastic interface. In addition, a nonperturbative vortex sheet approach is employed to examine the emergence of highly nonlinear, magnetically driven, wrinkling and folding equilibrium shape structures. A connection between the magnetoelastic shape solutions induced by a radial magnetic field and those produced by nonmagnetic means through centrifugal forces is also discussed.

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