Mathematical modelling of the overflowing cylinder experiment

The overflowing cylinder (OFC) is an experimental apparatus designed to generate a controlled straining flow at a free surface, whose dynamic properties may then be investigated. Surfactant solution is pumped up slowly through a vertical cylinder. On reaching the top, the liquid forms a flat free su...

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Main Authors: Howell, P, Breward, C
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2003
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author Howell, P
Breward, C
author_facet Howell, P
Breward, C
author_sort Howell, P
collection OXFORD
description The overflowing cylinder (OFC) is an experimental apparatus designed to generate a controlled straining flow at a free surface, whose dynamic properties may then be investigated. Surfactant solution is pumped up slowly through a vertical cylinder. On reaching the top, the liquid forms a flat free surface which expands radially before overflowing down the side of the cylinder. The velocity, surface tension and surfactant concentration on the expanding free surface are measured using a variety of non-invasive techniques. A mathematical model for the OFC has been previously derived by Breward et al. (2001) and shown to give satisfactory agreement with experimental results. However, a puzzling indeterminacy in the model renders it unable to predict one scalar parameter (e.g. the surfactant concentration at the centre of the cylinder), which must be therefore be taken from the experiments. In this paper we analyse the OFC model asymptotically and numerically. We show that solutions typically develop one of two possible singularities. In the first, the surface concentration of surfactant reaches zero a finite distance from the cylinder axis, while the surface velocity tends to infinity there. In the second, the surfactant concentration is exponentially large and a stagnation point forms just inside the rim of the cylinder. We propose a criterion for selecting the free parameter, based on the elimination of both singularities, and show that it leads to good agreement with experimental results.
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spelling oxford-uuid:41e1491e-2f11-47d5-a711-8fe215459e662022-03-26T14:46:18ZMathematical modelling of the overflowing cylinder experimentJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:41e1491e-2f11-47d5-a711-8fe215459e66EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2003Howell, PBreward, CThe overflowing cylinder (OFC) is an experimental apparatus designed to generate a controlled straining flow at a free surface, whose dynamic properties may then be investigated. Surfactant solution is pumped up slowly through a vertical cylinder. On reaching the top, the liquid forms a flat free surface which expands radially before overflowing down the side of the cylinder. The velocity, surface tension and surfactant concentration on the expanding free surface are measured using a variety of non-invasive techniques. A mathematical model for the OFC has been previously derived by Breward et al. (2001) and shown to give satisfactory agreement with experimental results. However, a puzzling indeterminacy in the model renders it unable to predict one scalar parameter (e.g. the surfactant concentration at the centre of the cylinder), which must be therefore be taken from the experiments. In this paper we analyse the OFC model asymptotically and numerically. We show that solutions typically develop one of two possible singularities. In the first, the surface concentration of surfactant reaches zero a finite distance from the cylinder axis, while the surface velocity tends to infinity there. In the second, the surfactant concentration is exponentially large and a stagnation point forms just inside the rim of the cylinder. We propose a criterion for selecting the free parameter, based on the elimination of both singularities, and show that it leads to good agreement with experimental results.
spellingShingle Howell, P
Breward, C
Mathematical modelling of the overflowing cylinder experiment
title Mathematical modelling of the overflowing cylinder experiment
title_full Mathematical modelling of the overflowing cylinder experiment
title_fullStr Mathematical modelling of the overflowing cylinder experiment
title_full_unstemmed Mathematical modelling of the overflowing cylinder experiment
title_short Mathematical modelling of the overflowing cylinder experiment
title_sort mathematical modelling of the overflowing cylinder experiment
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