Contact line instability and pattern selection in thermally driven liquid films

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Abstract

Liquids spreading over a solid substrate under the action of various forces are known to exhibit a long wavelength contact line instability. We use an example of thermally driven spreading on a horizontal surface to study how the stability of the flow can be altered, or patterns selected, using feedback control. We show that thermal perturbations of certain spatial structure imposed behind the contact line and proportional to the deviation of the contact line from its mean position can completely suppress the instability. Due to the presence of mean flow and a spatially nonuniform nature of spreading liquid films the dynamics of disturbances is governed by a non-normal evolution operator, opening up a possibility of transient amplification and nonlinear instabilities. We show that in the case of thermal driving the non-normality can be significant, especially for small wavenumber disturbances, and trace the origin of transient amplification to a close alignment of a large group of eigenfunctions of the evolution operator. However, for values of noise likely to occur in experiments we find that the transient amplification is not sufficiently strong to either change the predictions of the linear stability analysis or invalidate the proposed control approach. © 2003 American Institute of Physics.

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Grigoriev, R. O. (2003). Contact line instability and pattern selection in thermally driven liquid films. Physics of Fluids, 15(6), 1363–1374. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1566958

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