Journal of Fluid Mechanics | 2019

Electric field mediated von Kármán vortices in stratified microflows: transition from linear instabilities to coherent mixing

 
 
 
 

Abstract


Application of an electric field across the pressure-driven stratified flow of a pair of miscible fluids inside a microchannel manifests interesting electrohydrodynamic (EHD) instabilities. Experiments uncover distinctive instability regimes with an increase in electric field Rayleigh number (\n $Ra^{\\unicode[STIX]{x1D713}}$\n ) – a linear-onset regime, a time-periodic nonlinear regime analogous to the von Karman vortex street in the downstream and a regime with coherent flow patterns. The experiments also reveal that such linear and nonlinear instabilities can be stimulated non-invasively in a microchannel to mix or de-mix fluids simply by turning the electric field on or off, indicating the suitability of the process for on-demand micromixing. The characteristics of these instabilities have been theoretically investigated with the help of an Orr–Sommerfeld framework, which discloses the possibility of five distinctive finite-wavenumber modes for the instability. The EHD stresses originating due to the application of electric field stimulate a pair of shorter-wavelength electric field modes beyond a critical value of $Ra^{\\unicode[STIX]{x1D713}}$\n . Increase in the levels of charge injection and EHD stresses lower the critical $Ra^{\\unicode[STIX]{x1D713}}$\n of these modes. The relatively longer-wavelength viscous mode is found to appear when the viscosity stratification between the fluid layers is high. Beyond a threshold Schmidt number (\n $Sc$\n ), a diffusive mode is also found to appear near the mixed interfacial region. A thinner interface between the fluids at a higher $Sc$\n helps this mode to behave as the interfacial mode of immiscible fluids. Contrast of ionic mobility in the fluids leads to the appearance of the K-mode of instability at much shorter wavelengths. The reported phenomena can be of significance in the domains of microscale mixing, pumping, heat exchange, mass transfer and reaction engineering.

Volume 865
Pages 169-211
DOI 10.1017/JFM.2018.1023
Language English
Journal Journal of Fluid Mechanics

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