Pattern Formation During Deformation of a Confined Viscoelastic Layer: From a Viscous Liquid to a Soft Elastic Solid
Abstract
We study pattern formation during tensile deformation of confined viscoelastic layers. The use of a model system (PDMS with different degrees of crosslinking) allows us to go continuously from a viscous liquid to an elastic solid. We observe two distinct regimes of fingering instabilities: a regime called "elastic" with interfacial crack propagation where the fingering wavelength only scales with the film thickness, and a bulk regime called "viscoelastic" where the fingering instability shows a Saffman-Taylor-like behavior. We find good quantitative agreement with theory in both cases and present a reduced parameter describing the transition between the two regimes and allowing to predict the observed patterns over the whole range of viscoelastic properties.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0804.3873,
title = {Pattern Formation During Deformation of a Confined Viscoelastic Layer: From a Viscous Liquid to a Soft Elastic Solid},
author = {J. Nase and A. Lindner and C. Creton},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0804.3873},
year = {2008}
}
Comments
4 pages, 7 figures, typos corrected, figure 5 replaced