4.6 Article

Plateau-Rayleigh instability in a soft viscoelastic material

Journal

SOFT MATTER
Volume 17, Issue 15, Pages 4170-4179

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1sm00019e

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This study examines the instability of soft cylindrical interfaces and cylindrical cavities due to the competition between elasticity and capillarity. Elasticity stabilizes the instability while compressibility destabilizes it. The critical wavenumber shows a more complex dependence upon compressibility for the cylinder but exhibits a predictable trend for the cylindrical cavity.
A soft cylindrical interface endowed with surface tension can be unstable to wavy undulations. This is known as the Plateau-Rayleigh instability (PRI) and for solids the instability is governed by the competition between elasticity and capillarity. A dynamic stability analysis is performed for the cases of a soft (i) cylinder and (ii) cylindrical cavity assuming the material is viscoelastic with power-law rheology. The governing equations are made time-independent through the Laplace transform from which a solution is constructed using displacement potentials. The dispersion relationships are then derived, which depend upon the dimensionless elastocapillary number, solid Deborah number, and compressibility number, and the static stability limit, critical disturbance, and maximum growth rate are computed. This dynamic analysis recovers previous literature results in the appropriate limits. Elasticity stabilizes and compressibility destabilizes the PRI. For an incompressible material, viscoelasticity does not affect stability but does decrease the growth rate and shift the critical wavenumber to lower values. The critical wavenumber shows a more complex dependence upon compressibility for the cylinder but exhibits a predictable trend for the cylindrical cavity.

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