On the origin of the circular hydraulic jump in a thin liquid film

thin films capillary waves 0103 physical sciences Fluid Dynamics (physics.flu-dyn) interfacial flows (free surface) FOS: Physical sciences Physics - Fluid Dynamics 01 natural sciences
DOI: 10.1017/jfm.2018.558 Publication Date: 2018-07-31T11:02:31Z
ABSTRACT
This study explores the formation of circular thin-film hydraulic jumps caused by the normal impact of a jet on an infinite planar surface. For more than a century, it has been believed that all hydraulic jumps are created due to gravity. However, we show that these thin-film hydraulic jumps result from energy loss due to surface tension and viscous forces alone. We show that, at the jump, surface tension and viscous forces balance the momentum in the liquid film and gravity plays no significant role. Experiments show no dependence on the orientation of the surface and a scaling relation balancing viscous forces and surface tension collapses the experimental data. A theoretical analysis shows that the downstream transport of surface energy is the previously neglected critical ingredient in these flows, and that capillary waves play the role of gravity waves in a traditional jump in demarcating the transition from the supercritical to subcritical flow associated with these jumps.
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