TY - JOUR
T1 - Liquid toroidal drop in compressional Stokes flow
AU - Zabarankin, Michael
AU - Lavrenteva, Olga M.
AU - Nir, Avinoam
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Cambridge University Press.
PY - 2015/11/23
Y1 - 2015/11/23
N2 - The deformation of an immiscible toroidal drop embedded in axisymmetric compressional Stokes flow is analysed via the boundary integral formulation in the case of equal viscosity. Numerical simulations are performed for the drop having initially the shape of a torus with circular cross-section. The quasi-stationary dynamic simulations reveal that, when the viscous forces, proportional to the intensity of the flow, are relatively weak compared with the surface tension (the ratio of these forces is characterized by the capillary number, ), three different scenarios of drop evolution are possible: indefinite expansion of the liquid torus, contraction to the centre and a stationary toroidal shape. When the intensity of the flow is low, the stationary shapes are shown to be close to circular tori. Once the outer flow strengthens, the cross-section of the stationary torus assumes first an elliptic and then an egg-like shape. For the capillary number greater than a critical value, , toroidal stationary shapes were not found. Remarkably, is close to the critical capillary number found previously for a simply connected drop flattened in compressional flow. Thus, a new example of non-uniqueness of stationary drop shape in viscous flow is obtained. Approximate stationary solutions in the form of tori with circular and elliptic cross-sections are obtained by minimizing the normal velocity over the drop interface. They are shown to be in good agreement with the stationary shapes from quasi-dynamic simulations for the corresponding intervals of the capillary number.
AB - The deformation of an immiscible toroidal drop embedded in axisymmetric compressional Stokes flow is analysed via the boundary integral formulation in the case of equal viscosity. Numerical simulations are performed for the drop having initially the shape of a torus with circular cross-section. The quasi-stationary dynamic simulations reveal that, when the viscous forces, proportional to the intensity of the flow, are relatively weak compared with the surface tension (the ratio of these forces is characterized by the capillary number, ), three different scenarios of drop evolution are possible: indefinite expansion of the liquid torus, contraction to the centre and a stationary toroidal shape. When the intensity of the flow is low, the stationary shapes are shown to be close to circular tori. Once the outer flow strengthens, the cross-section of the stationary torus assumes first an elliptic and then an egg-like shape. For the capillary number greater than a critical value, , toroidal stationary shapes were not found. Remarkably, is close to the critical capillary number found previously for a simply connected drop flattened in compressional flow. Thus, a new example of non-uniqueness of stationary drop shape in viscous flow is obtained. Approximate stationary solutions in the form of tori with circular and elliptic cross-sections are obtained by minimizing the normal velocity over the drop interface. They are shown to be in good agreement with the stationary shapes from quasi-dynamic simulations for the corresponding intervals of the capillary number.
KW - computational methods
KW - drops
KW - low-Reynolds-number flows
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U2 - 10.1017/jfm.2015.628
DO - 10.1017/jfm.2015.628
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84947968381
SN - 0022-1120
VL - 785
SP - 372
EP - 400
JO - Journal of Fluid Mechanics
JF - Journal of Fluid Mechanics
ER -