STOKES FLOW
STOKES FLOW
Stokes flow (named
after George
Gabriel Stokes), also named creeping flow or creeping
motion, is a type of fluid flow where advective inertial forces are small compared
with viscous forces. The Reynolds number is low,
i.e. . This is a typical situation in flows where the fluid velocities are
very slow, the viscosities are very large, or the length-scales of the flow are
very small. Creeping flow was first studied to understand lubrication. In nature this type of flow
occurs in the swimming of microorganisms and sperm. In technology, it occurs
in paint, MEMS devices, and in the flow of viscous polymers generally.
The equations of motion for
Stokes flow, called the Stokes equations, are a linearization of the Navier–Stokes
equations, and thus can be solved by a number of well-known methods
for linear differential equations. The primary Green's function of Stokes flow is
the Stokeslet, which is associated with a singular point force embedded in
a Stokes flow. From its derivatives, other fundamental solutions can
be obtained.The Stokeslet was first derived by Oseen in 1927, although it was
not named as such until 1953 by Hancock.The closed-form fundamental solutions for
the generalized unsteady Stokes and Oseen flows associated with arbitrary
time-dependent translational and rotational motions have been derived for the
Newtonian and micropolar fluids.
Stokes equations
The equation of motion for Stokes
flow can be obtained by linearizing the steady state Navier–Stokes
equations. The inertial forces are assumed to be negligible in
comparison to the viscous forces, and eliminating the inertial terms of the
momentum balance in the Navier–Stokes equations reduces it to the momentum
balance in the Stokes equations
where is
the stress (sum of
viscous and pressure stresses) and an applied body force. The full Stokes
equations also include an equation for the conservation of mass,
commonly written in the form:
where is
the fluid density and the fluid velocity. To obtain the
equations of motion for incompressible flow, it is assumed that the
density, ,
is a constant.
Furthermore, occasionally one
might consider the unsteady Stokes equations, in which the term is
added to the left hand side of the momentum balance equation.
Properties
The Stokes equations represent a
considerable simplification of the full Navier–Stokes
equations, especially in the incompressible Newtonian case. They
are the leading-order simplification
of the full Navier–Stokes equations, valid in the distinguished limit
Instantaneity
A Stokes flow has no dependence
on time other than through time-dependent boundary conditions. This
means that, given the boundary conditions of a Stokes flow, the flow can be
found without knowledge of the flow at any other time.
Time-reversibility
An immediate consequence of
instantaneity, time-reversibility means that a time-reversed Stokes flow solves
the same equations as the original Stokes flow. This property can sometimes be
used (in conjunction with linearity and symmetry in the boundary conditions) to
derive results about a flow without solving it fully. Time reversibility means
that it is difficult to mix two fluids using creeping flow.
Time-reversibility
of Stokes Flows: Dye has been injected into a viscous fluid sandwiched between
two concentric cylinders (top panel). The core cylinder is then rotated to
shear the dye into a spiral as viewed from above. The dye appears to be mixed
with the fluid viewed from the side (middle panel). The rotation is then
reversed bringing the cylinder to its original position. The dye
"unmixes" (bottom panel). Reversal is not perfect because some
diffusion of dye occurs.
While these properties are true
for incompressible Newtonian Stokes flows, the non-linear and sometimes
time-dependent nature of non-Newtonian fluids means
that they do not hold in the more general case.
Stokes paradox
An interesting property of Stokes
flow is known as the Stokes' paradox: that there can be no Stokes
flow of a fluid around a disk in two dimensions; or, equivalently, the fact
there is no non-trivial solution for the Stokes equations around an infinitely
long cylinder.
Demonstration of time-reversibility
A Taylor–Couette system can
create laminar flows in which concentric cylinders of fluid move past each
other in an apparent spiral.A fluid such as corn syrup with high viscosity
fills the gap between two cylinders, with colored regions of the fluid visible
through the transparent outer cylinder. The cylinders are rotated relative to
one another at a low speed, which together with the high viscosity of the fluid
and thinness of the gap gives a low Reynolds number, so that the apparent mixing of
colors is actually laminar and can then
be reversed to approximately the initial state. This creates a dramatic
demonstration of seemingly mixing a fluid and then unmixing it by reversing the
direction of the mixer.
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