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Saffman-Taylor instability for viscoelastic fluids: from viscous fingering to elastic fractures
Serge Mora
Laboratoire des Colloides, Verres et Nanomatériaux Université de Montpellier 2 / CNRS
Wed, Nov. 04th 2009, 11:15
SPEC Salle Itzykson, Bât.774, Orme des Merisiers

Saffman-Taylor instability arises when a fluid is pushed on to a more viscous fluid between closely spaced parallel plates. The interface between the fluids develops a hydrodynamic instability leading to the formation of fingerlike patterns. If the invaded fluid is a complex fluid (as polymer solutions, clays, foams, etc.) one sometimes observes unexpected fracturelike patterns. Very little is known about the origin of those fractures, and a general physical explanation of fracture nucleation is lacking. I will present a study of the linear stability of an air front pushing on a model viscoelastic fluid inside a Hele-Shaw cell. The linear growth rate of a small initial perturbation is found to diverge above a pressure threshold, and experiments prove that this divergence is associated to a fracturelike pattern instability of the interface. This provide an hydrodynamic insight of fracture rise.

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