User:Hh73wiki/Dynamic Fluid Film Equations Update

An example of dynamic fluid films.

Fluid films, such as soap films, are commonly encountered in everyday experience. A soap film can be formed by dipping a closed contour wire into a soapy solution as in the figure on the right. Alternatively, a catenoid can be formed by dipping two rings in the soapy solution and subsequently separating them while maintaining the coaxial configuration.

Stationary fluid films form surfaces of minimal surface area, leading to the Plateau problem.

On the other hand, fluid films display fascinating and rich dynamic properties. They can undergo enormous deformations away from the equilibrium configuration. Furthermore, they display several orders of magnitude variations in thickness from nanometers to millimeters. Thus, a fluid film can simultaneously display nanoscale and macroscale phenomena.

In the study of the dynamics of free fluid films, such as soap films, it is common to model the film as two dimensional manifolds. Then the variable thickness of the film is captured by the two dimensional density .

The dynamics of fluid films can be described by the following system of exact nonlinear Hamiltonian equations which, in that respect, are a complete analogue of Euler's inviscid equations of fluid dynamics. In fact, these equations reduce to Euler's dynamic equations for flows in stationary Euclidean spaces.

The foregoing relies on the formalism of tensors, including the summation convention and the raising and lowering of tensor indices.

The full dynamic system

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Consider a thin fluid film   that spans a stationary closed contour boundary. Let   be the normal component of the velocity field and   be the contravariant components of the tangential velocity projection. Let   be the covariant surface derivative,   be the covariant curvature tensor,   be the mixed curvature tensor and   be its trace, that is mean curvature. Furthermore, let the internal energy density per unit mass function be   so that the total potential energy   is given by

 

This choice of   :

 

where   is the surface energy density results in Laplace's classical model for surface tension:

 

where A is the total area of the soap film.

The governing system reads

 

where the  -derivative is the central operator, originally due to Jacques Hadamard, in the The Calculus of Moving Surfaces. Note that, in compressible models, the combination   is commonly identified with pressure  . The governing system above was originally formulated in reference 1.

For the Laplace choice of surface tension   the system becomes:

 

Note that on flat ( ) stationary ( ) manifolds, the system becomes

 

which is precisely classical Euler's equations of fluid dynamics.

A simplified system

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If one disregards the tangential components of the velocity field, as frequently done in the study of thin fluid film, one arrives at the following simplified system with only two unknowns: the two dimensional density   and the normal velocity  :

 

Reformulated Fluid film equations with

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The fluid film equations, first introduced in \cite{FluidFilmsJGSP}, are formulated in terms of the  -derivative. The last equation in the system, governs the evolution of the contravariant components   of the tangential velocity field and features the term   on the left hand side. Therefore, the corresponding equation for the evolution of the covariant components   is different. The new operator   eliminates this incovenience and yields a system that is valid for covariant and contravariant components. In the new form, the system reads:

 

Note we in fact mixed the covariant and contraviant components   and   which we can now do more freely than before.

References

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1. Exact nonlinear equations for fluid films and proper adaptations of conservation theorems from classical hydrodynamics P. Grinfeld, J. Geom. Sym. Phys. 16, 2009

Category:Continuum mechanics Category:Fluid dynamics Category:Fluid mechanics Category:Nonlinear systems Category:Differential geometry Category:Manifolds