Flapping instability of elastic disks in Stokes flows

Abstract

Fluid-structure interactions at low Reynolds number can lead to a much richer phenomenology than previously expected. Here, we study the dynamics of a freely suspended, thin elastic disk in a shear flow, where the plane of the disk is initially parallel to the flow plane. Using a combination of experiments and simulations, we demonstrate that beyond a critical flow strength the disk deforms, performing flapping dynamics, in which the disk curves up and down periodically relative to the horizontal shear plane. The bifurcation diagram obtained by simulation reveals several oscillatory solutions, including a wiggling motion that is predicted by a linear stability analysis. The flapping dynamics is shown to be a subcritical instability whose key ingredient is the finite extensibility of the disk. The behavior we observe has implications for emerging investigations on the flow dynamics of sheet-like particles, such as 2D polymers and 2D crystalline materials immersed in viscous fluids.

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