Effects of Inclined Interface Angle on Compressible Rayleigh-Taylor Instability: A Numerical Study Based on the Discrete Boltzmann Method

Entropy (Basel). 2023 Dec 5;25(12):1623. doi: 10.3390/e25121623.

Abstract

Rayleigh-Taylor (RT) instability is a basic fluid interface instability that widely exists in nature and in the engineering field. To investigate the impact of the initial inclined interface on compressible RT instability, the two-component discrete Boltzmann method is employed. Both the thermodynamic non-equilibrium (TNE) and hydrodynamic non-equilibrium (HNE) effects are studied. It can be found that the global average density gradient in the horizontal direction, the non-organized energy fluxes, the global average non-equilibrium intensity and the proportion of the non-equilibrium region first increase and then reduce with time. However, the global average density gradient in the vertical direction and the non-organized moment fluxes first descend, then rise, and finally descend. Furthermore, the global average density gradient, the typical TNE intensity and the proportion of non-equilibrium region increase with increasing angle of the initial inclined interface. Physically, there are three competitive mechanisms: (1) As the perturbed interface elongates, the contact area between the two fluids expands, which results in an increasing gradient of macroscopic physical quantities and leads to a strengthening of the TNE effects. (2) Under the influence of viscosity, the perturbation pressure waves on both sides of the material interface decrease with time, which makes the gradient of the macroscopic physical quantity decrease, resulting in a weakening of the TNE strength. (3) Due to dissipation and/or mutual penetration of the two fluids, the gradient of macroscopic physical quantities gradually diminishes, resulting in a decrease in the intensity of the TNE.

Keywords: Rayleigh–Taylor instability; compressible fluid; discrete Boltzmann method; initial inclined interface; non-equilibrium effects.

Grants and funding

This research was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (under Grant Nos. U2242214, 51806116, 11875001), Natural Science Foundation of Fujian Province (under Grant Nos. 2021J01652, 2021J01655), and Guangdong Basic and Applied Basic Research Foundation (under Grant No. 2022A1515012116).