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Interfacial stability is important for many processes involving heat and mass transfer across two immiscible phases. When this transfer takes place in the form of evaporation of a binary solution with one component being more volatile than the other, gradients in surface tension can arise. These gradients can ultimately destabilise the liquid-gas interface. In the present work, we study the evaporation of an ethanol-water solution, for which ethanol has a larger volatility. The solution is contained in a horizontal Hele-Shaw cell which is open from one end to allow for evaporation into air. A Marangoni instability is then triggered at the liquid-air interface. We study the temporal evolution of this instability by observing the effects that it has on the bulk of the liquid. More specifically, the growth of convective cells is visualized with confocal microscopy and the velocity field close to the interface is measured with micro-particle-image-velocimetry. The results of numerical simulations based on quasi 2D equations satisfactorily compare with the experimental observations, even without consideration of evaporative cooling, although this cooling can play an extra role in experiments. Furthermore, a linear stability analysis applied to a simplified version of the quasi 2D equations showed reasonably good agreement with the results from simulations at early times, when the instability has just been triggered and no coarsening has taken place. In particular, we find a critical Marangoni number below which a regime of stability is predicted.
We report experimental results for the Kelvin-Helmholtz instability between two immiscible fluids in parallel flow in a Hele-Shaw cell. We focus our interest on the influence of the gap size between the walls on the instability characteristics. Exper
We study microfluidic self digitization in Hele-Shaw cells using pancake droplets anchored to surface tension traps. We show that above a critical flow rate, large anchored droplets break up to form two daughter droplets, one of which remains in the
The flow in a Hele-Shaw cell with a time-increasing gap poses a unique shrinking interface problem. When the upper plate of the cell is lifted perpendicularly at a prescribed speed, the exterior less viscous fluid penetrates the interior more viscous
Marangoni instabilities can emerge when a liquid interface is subjected to a concentration or temperature gradient. It is generally believed that for these instabilities bulk effects like buoyancy are negligible as compared to interfacial forces, esp
We adopt a boundary integral method to study the dynamics of a translating droplet confined in a Hele-Shaw cell in the Stokes regime. The droplet is driven by the motion of the ambient fluid with the same viscosity. We characterize the three-dimensio