Fingering instabilities of a reactive micellar interface.
暂无分享,去创建一个
We present an experimental study of the fingering patterns in a Hele-Shaw cell occurring when a gel-like material forms at the interface between aqueous solutions of a cationic surfactant (cetyltrimethylammonium bromide) and an organic salt (salicylic acid), two solutions known to form a highly elastic wormlike micellar fluid when mixed homogeneously. A variety of fingering instabilities are observed, depending on the velocity of the front (the injection rate), and on which fluid is injected into which. We have found a regime of nonconfined stationary or wavy fingers for which width selection seems to occur without the presence of bounding walls, unlike the Saffman-Taylor experiment. Qualitatively, some of our observations share common mechanisms with instabilities of cooling lava flows or growing biofilms.
[1] G. G. Stokes. "J." , 1890, The New Yale Book of Quotations.
[2] D'arcy W. Thompson. On growth and form i , 1943 .
[3] J. Israelachvili. Intermolecular and surface forces , 1985 .
[4] Ericka Stricklin-Parker,et al. Ann , 2005 .
[5] R. Larson. The Structure and Rheology of Complex Fluids , 1998 .
[6] B. M. Fulk. MATH , 1992 .