Faraday instability in a near-critical fluid under weightlessness

G. Gandikota, D. Chatain, S. Amiroudine, T. Lyubimova, and D. Beysens
Phys. Rev. E 89, 013022 – Published 28 January 2014

Abstract

Experiments on near-critical hydrogen have been conducted under magnetic compensation of gravity to investigate the Faraday instability that arises at the liquid-vapor interface under zero-gravity conditions. We investigated such instability in the absence of stabilizing gravity. Under such conditions, vibration orients the interface and can destabilize it. The experiments confirm the existence of Faraday waves and demonstrate a transition from a square to a line pattern close to the critical point. They also show a transition very close to the critical point from Faraday to periodic layering of the vapor-liquid interface perpendicular to vibration. It was seen that the Faraday wave instability is favored when the liquid-vapor density difference is large enough (fluid far from the critical point), whereas periodic layering predominates for small difference in the liquid and vapor densities (close to the critical point). It was observed for the Faraday wave instability that the wavelength of the instability decreases as one approaches the critical point. The experimental results demonstrate good agreement to the dispersion relation for zero gravity except for temperatures very close to the critical point where a transition from a square pattern to a line pattern is detected, similarly to what is observed under 1g conditions.

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  • Received 17 July 2013

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.89.013022

©2014 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

G. Gandikota1, D. Chatain1, S. Amiroudine2, T. Lyubimova3, and D. Beysens1,4

  • 1SBT, UMR-E CEA/UJF-Grenoble 1, INAC, Grenoble F-38054, France
  • 2Université Bordeaux 1, Institut de Mécanique et d’Ingénierie, UMR CNRS 5295, 16 Av. Pey-Berland, 33607 Pessac Cedex, France
  • 3Institute of Continuous Media Mechanics UB RAS, 1 Koroleva Str., 614013 Perm, Russia
  • 4CEA-ESEME, ESPCI-PMMH, 10 rue Vauquelin, 75005 Paris, France

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Issue

Vol. 89, Iss. 1 — January 2014

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