Viscous fingering is a widely observed phenomenon, in which finger-like instabilities occur at the interface of two fluids, whenever a less viscous phase displaces a more viscous phase. This instability is notoriously difficult to control, especially for given viscosity ratio and geometry. Here we demonstrate experimentally the active control of viscous fingering of two given liquids, for given geometry and flow rate in a Hele-Shaw cell. The control is realized by taking advantage of electro-osmotic flows along the surfaces confining the fluid, via applying an external electric field. Depending on the direction of electric field, the induced secondary electro-osmotic flows either assist or oppose the hydraulic flow, effectively reducing or ...
Electrohydrodynamics (EHD) describes the area of research, which studies the interactions of fluid m...
We study the fingering instability of a circular interface between two immiscible liquids in a radia...
The hydrodynamic viscous fingering instability can be influenced by a simple viscosity-changing chem...
Viscous fingering is an extensively observed phenomenon in porous media or Hele-Shaw cells. In gener...
Viscous fingering is a commonly observed interfacial instability during fluid displacement, where a ...
Figure 1 Viscous fingering is a morphological pattern in an unstable interface between two fluids in...
The phenomenon of interfacial motion between two immiscible viscous fluids in the narrow gap between...
Viscous fingering experiments in Hele-Shaw cells lead to striking pattern formations which have been...
The phenomena of viscous fingering in the flow of immiscible fluids in Hele-Shaw cells is discussed....
Viscous fingers form when in a thin linear channel a fluid pushes a more viscous fluid. The instabil...
In the early twentieth century, petroleum and mining engineers noticed that water does not displace ...
Motivated by studies suggesting that the patterns exhibited by the collectively expanding fronts of ...
We study the viscous fingering instability in a radial Hele-Shaw cell in which the top boundary has...
Viscous fingering occurs when one fluid displaces another fluid of a greater viscosity in a porous m...
Viscous fingering occurs when a less viscous fluid is driven into a more viscous fluid in a porous ...
Electrohydrodynamics (EHD) describes the area of research, which studies the interactions of fluid m...
We study the fingering instability of a circular interface between two immiscible liquids in a radia...
The hydrodynamic viscous fingering instability can be influenced by a simple viscosity-changing chem...
Viscous fingering is an extensively observed phenomenon in porous media or Hele-Shaw cells. In gener...
Viscous fingering is a commonly observed interfacial instability during fluid displacement, where a ...
Figure 1 Viscous fingering is a morphological pattern in an unstable interface between two fluids in...
The phenomenon of interfacial motion between two immiscible viscous fluids in the narrow gap between...
Viscous fingering experiments in Hele-Shaw cells lead to striking pattern formations which have been...
The phenomena of viscous fingering in the flow of immiscible fluids in Hele-Shaw cells is discussed....
Viscous fingers form when in a thin linear channel a fluid pushes a more viscous fluid. The instabil...
In the early twentieth century, petroleum and mining engineers noticed that water does not displace ...
Motivated by studies suggesting that the patterns exhibited by the collectively expanding fronts of ...
We study the viscous fingering instability in a radial Hele-Shaw cell in which the top boundary has...
Viscous fingering occurs when one fluid displaces another fluid of a greater viscosity in a porous m...
Viscous fingering occurs when a less viscous fluid is driven into a more viscous fluid in a porous ...
Electrohydrodynamics (EHD) describes the area of research, which studies the interactions of fluid m...
We study the fingering instability of a circular interface between two immiscible liquids in a radia...
The hydrodynamic viscous fingering instability can be influenced by a simple viscosity-changing chem...