Bulletin of the American Physical Society
71st Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Fluid Dynamics
Volume 63, Number 13
Sunday–Tuesday, November 18–20, 2018; Atlanta, Georgia
Session D04: Focus Session: The Physics of Microscale Fluid Structure Interactions: Fully Coupled Flow and Deformation Mechanics II
2:30 PM–4:27 PM,
Sunday, November 18, 2018
Georgia World Congress Center
Room: B206
Chair: Federico Municchi, Purdue University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2018.DFD.D04.6
Abstract: D04.00006 : Modelling bubble propagation in elasto-rigid Hele-Shaw channels*
3:35 PM–3:48 PM
Presenter:
Joao Fontana
(School of Physics & Astronomy, University of Manchester)
Authors:
Joao Fontana
(School of Physics & Astronomy, University of Manchester)
Anne Juel
(School of Physics & Astronomy, University of Manchester)
Andrew Hazel
(School of Mathematics, University of Manchester)
We study a model of pulmonary airway reopening where air is driven at constant volume flux into a liquid-filled Hele-Shaw channel, with an upper compliant boundary. An equivalent rigid channel supports a stable, steadily propagating air finger and a variety of unstable solutions. In the compliant channel, however, initial collapse of the channel introduces additional cross-sectional depth gradients. The induced normal and transverse depth variations alter the finger morphology and promote a variety of instabilities from tip-splitting to small-scale fingering on the curved front. A depth-averaged model for the system is simulated numerically using the open-source, finite-element library, oomph-lib, in order to explore underlying mechanisms and the relative importance of the elastic, capillary and viscous effects. The model exhibits a complex solution structure and qualitatively similar instabilities to those observed experimentally. The solution structure is related to that found in a rigid Hele-Shaw channel but here the solutions interact due to the fluid-structure interaction introduced by the compliant boundary.
*Many thanks to the University of Manchester for funding this research project.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2018.DFD.D04.6
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