Extensive tip-splitting of injected organic liquid into an aqueous viscoelastic fluid

Kiwamu Yoshii, Kojiro Otoguro, Ayane Pygoscelis Sato, Yutaka Sumino

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

The injection of a fluid into another fluid causes a spatiotemporal pattern along the injection front. Viscous fingering is a well-known example when the replaced material is a viscous fluid. Notably, most fluids are, in reality, viscoelastic, i.e., they behave as an elastic solid over short timescales. For this reason, it is important to study the situation when the replaced fluid is viscoelastic. In this study, we observed a dynamics of fluids when an incompressible organic liquid was injected into an oleophilic Hele–Shaw cell filled with an aqueous viscoelastic fluid made of a wormlike micellar solution. We found extensive tip splitting of the injection front, which led to thin fingers with a characteristic size comparable to four times the cell thickness. We examined the material properties and suggest that the thin fingering pattern observed in our system is due to the delamination of viscoelastic fluid from the bottom substrate surface. Our result shows that the effect of interfacial energy in the existing solid layer should be considered in the injection process.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1332187
JournalFrontiers in Physics
Volume12
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Keywords

  • delamination
  • fingering
  • injection
  • viscoelastic fluid
  • wormlike micellar solution

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