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When space gets tight: confinement-driven particulate fingering

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 August 2025

Draga Pihler-Puzović*
Affiliation:
Manchester Centre for Nonlinear Dynamics and Department of Physics & Astronomy, University of Manchester, Oxford Road, Manchester M139PL, UK
*
Corresponding author: Draga Pihler-Puzović, draga.pihler-puzovic@manchester.ac.uk

Abstract

Fingering instabilities readily occur if a less viscous fluid displaces a more viscous fluid in a narrow gap due to the action of destabilising viscous forces. If the fluids are miscible, the instability can be suppressed in the limit of large advection as complicated flow structures are formed across the gap. Using a fluid to displace a monolayer of non-colloidal particles suspended in the same fluid, Luo et al. (2025 J. Fluid Mech. vol. 1011, A48) suppress the formation of the cross-gap structures and identify a new fingering mechanism which instead relies on long-range dipolar disturbance flows generated by the particle confinement.

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Focus on Fluids
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Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2025. Published by Cambridge University Press

1. Fingering instability

When a less viscous fluid displaces a more viscous fluid in a porous medium, its front readily destabilises, developing into complex continually evolving finger-like structures. The mechanism for the onset of this instability is well understood, at least in the simplest scenarios, such as when the two fluids are immiscible and moving in a narrow gap between two parallel walls (i.e. a Hele-Shaw cell). The phenomenon was famously studied by Saffman & Taylor (Reference Saffman and Taylor1958) who showed that in-plane perturbations to the flat interface grow because they select a path of least viscous resistance. This is counteracted by interfacial surface tension that acts to straighten the interface, stabilising it to short-wavelength disturbances, with linear theory predicting a square root scaling with the surface tension for the critical wavelength of the instability. However, long-term growth of the instability tends to be extremely sensitive to the initial conditions of the system, and repeated experiments in the same set-up will typically produce significantly different patterns (Couder Reference Couder2003).

The large aspect ratios of Hele-Shaw cells mean that the finger dynamics is often successfully modelled by a set of two-dimensional, depth-averaged lubrication equations which assume a parabolic velocity profile in the cell gap, and are mathematically analogous to the Darcy model for flow in a porous medium. Since interfacial growth is typically disordered, the instability is a useful toy model for investigating fundamental ideas of nonlinear dynamics which are hard to test in systems of increased complexity (Lawless, Juel & Pihler-Puzović Reference Lawless, Juel and Pihler-Puzović2025). The instability also features in many practical applications. Historically, it has been a major obstacle to efficient sweeping in enhanced oil recovery (Woods Reference Woods2014), and it occurs regularly in hydraulic fracturing (Osiptsov Reference Osiptsov2017), subsurface sequestration of CO $_2$ and hydrogen storage (Miocic et al. Reference Miocic, Heinemann, Edlmann, Scafidi, Molaei and Alcalde2023) and when treating groundwater contamination (Clayton Reference Clayton1998) amongst other applications. Unsurprisingly, a significant research effort has been directed towards controlling the onset of instabilities and their long-term evolution, including but not limited to creative ways of injecting the displacing fluid (Li et al. Reference Li, Lowengrub, Fontana and Palffy-Muhoray2009), changing the geometry of the confinement (Al-Housseiny, Tsai & Stone Reference Al-Housseiny, Tsai and Stone2012) or the constitutive behaviour of flowing fluids (Bischofberger, Ramachandran & Nagel Reference Bischofberger, Ramachandran and Nagel2014).

2. Miscible displacement

Many engineering systems feature miscible displacement flows, such as when lower viscosity liquid containing proppant is used to displace a more viscous liquid during alternate-slug fracturing; in this scenario, miscible fingering ensures a more uniform placement of particles that maintain the conductive paths through the rock by keeping the fractures open (Osiptsov Reference Osiptsov2017). The fluid mechanics of miscible fingering is inherently different from that described by Saffman & Taylor (Reference Saffman and Taylor1958), since no interface exists between the invading and displaced fluids. A similar stabilising role to that of surface tension can be played by diffusion, which controls the width of the mixed region, thereby setting the wavelength of the instability, with both predicted to increase with time according to the linear stability analysis (Tan & Homsy Reference Tan and Homsy1986). In another regime where advection dominates over diffusion, increasing the viscosity ratio between the invading and displaced fluids (while still maintaining it firmly below one) can also lead to complete suppression of fingering. This surprising phenomenon was first observed by Bischofberger et al. (Reference Bischofberger, Ramachandran and Nagel2014) for the case of simple mixtures of water and glycerol, but numerous related studies have since reported a delay in the onset of miscible fingering (Videbæk Reference Videbæk2020), including when a suspension of non-colloidal (quasi-neutrally) buoyant particles in oil is displaced by the same oil (Luo, Chen & Lee Reference Luo, Chen and Lee2020).

Figure 1. (a) Schematic of the experimental set-up: a glass-walled Hele-Shaw cell of gap thickness 0.76 $\pm$ 0.03 mm. (b) Instantaneous top view images of fingering produced by the clear silicone oil (dynamic viscosity 0.096 Pa s) displacing a suspension of polyethylene particles (diameter 0.625 $\pm$ 0.4 mm) in the same oil in the cell from (a) (indicted times are from the start of the experiment); particle volume fraction is 25 %, oil is injected at the flow rate of 3.62 ml min–1. Images supplied by R. Luo.

3. Bringing back confinement

The disappearance or delay of fingering during miscible displacement in the advection-dominated regime is counterintuitive, since neither surface tension nor thermal diffusion of colloidal particles are of relevance, and there is no apparent mechanism that can stop the destabilisation induced by the viscosity contrast. However, this simplistic view of the problem undermines the truly three-dimensional nature of the flow, which can lead to the development of complicated structures across the narrow cell gap. For example, in experiments by Luo et al. (Reference Luo, Chen and Lee2020), in-plane fingering disappears when a sharp cross-gap profile develops between the invading oil and the displaced suspension, a fluid with higher effective viscosity. The problem is further complicated by the shear-induced migration of particles that leads to their focusing in the centre of the cell gap, with the blunt tip of the profile becoming rounder in time.

Luo et al.’s (Reference Luo, Marshall, He, Wang and Lee2025) recent experiments with particle suspensions examine the same advection-dominated regime, but using a two-dimensional particle suspension. The particles form a monolayer inside a Hele-Shaw cell whose gap thickness is of the order of the particle diameter (figure 1 a). The new set-up is an ingenious way to study a displacement flow prone to fingering while preventing the formation of cross-gap flow structures. In contrast to all previous work in the advection-dominated regime, Luo et al. (Reference Luo, Marshall, He, Wang and Lee2025) observe fingering regardless of the (effective) viscosity ratio. Moreover, their systematic experiments performed by varying volume fractions of particles reveal the emergence of an average fingering wavelength which evolves over time (figure 1 b). However, the wavelength that emerges is not set by diffusion as is the case for the miscible fingers studied by Tan & Homsy (Reference Tan and Homsy1986).

The key ingredient in the observed behaviour is the hydrodynamic interaction between particles, which results in a collective dynamics akin to that observed in other two-dimensional suspensions (Desreumaux et al. Reference Desreumaux, Caussin, Jeanneret, Lauga and Bartolo2013) and clustering of magnetically driven micro-rollers (Driscoll et al. Reference Driscoll, Delmotte, Youssef, Sacanna, Donev and Chaikin2017). The confinement of particles slows them down relative to the local oil flow, which in turn induces a dipolar disturbance to the suspending oil. The slowly decaying disturbances lead to the development of a rarefaction region ahead of the clear oil that displaces the suspension. In this rarefaction region, which expands over time, the number density of the particles gradually increases from zero to the number density of the particles in the suspension. By combining experiments and linear stability analysis of a two-dimensional coarse-grained model, Luo et al. (Reference Luo, Marshall, He, Wang and Lee2025) show that the length scale of the rarefaction region sets the average length scale of the fingering instability. Furthermore, they demonstrate that the coarsening of fingers is independent of the initial particle density, which only controls the time scales of the instability.

4. Future

In their work, Luo et al. (Reference Luo, Marshall, He, Wang and Lee2025) have identified a new destabilisation mechanism that leads to miscible fingering in suspensions. This physical effect weakens over time, as often seen during various fingering phenomena, such as the aforementioned diffusion-controlled fingering studied by Tan & Homsy (Reference Tan and Homsy1986), or when immiscible flow is decelerated below an inflating elastic sheet making viscous forces less destabilising (Pihler-Puzović et al. Reference Pihler-Puzović, Peng, Lister, Heil and Juel2018).

It is yet to be quantified how and where the new mechanism becomes irrelevant and if instead the flow transitions to the particulate fingering explored by Luo et al. (Reference Luo, Chen and Lee2020), which bears resemblance to other miscible fingering phenomena in the limit of strong advection. This requires more experiments supported by mathematical modelling, in which the gap thickness and the particle density are systematically varied. Another interesting limit is the case in which the number of suspended particles approaches the maximum packing volume fraction within the monolayer. In this limit, the instability discussed here is likely more similar to the fingering explored by Sandnes et al. (Reference Sandnes, Flekkøy, Knudsen, Måløy and See2011), in which the frictional interactions between particles are significant. Understanding the impact of sidewalls, non-uniform particle distributions, or soft response of particles are just some of the many outstanding questions for practical implications of the phenomenon unravelled by Luo et al. (Reference Luo, Marshall, He, Wang and Lee2025).

Finally, the set-up of Luo et al. (Reference Luo, Marshall, He, Wang and Lee2025) offers exciting possibilities for further fundamental studies in fingering. For example, Chevalier, Lindner & Clément (Reference Chevalier, Lindner and Clément2007) explored a subcritical transition to disorder of a steadily advancing symmetric air finger displacing a particulate suspension in a Hele-Shaw cell, in which the volume fraction of particles was systematically increased. Using the two-dimensional suspensions instead could provide another means of changing finite-amplitude perturbations to the advancing finger.

Acknowledgements

D.P.P. is grateful to R. Luo and S. Lee for reading earlier versions of this article and supplying the images for it. D.P.P. would also like to thank F. Box and A. Juel for their valuable feedback on the article.

Declaration of interests

The author reports no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. (a) Schematic of the experimental set-up: a glass-walled Hele-Shaw cell of gap thickness 0.76 $\pm$ 0.03 mm. (b) Instantaneous top view images of fingering produced by the clear silicone oil (dynamic viscosity 0.096 Pa s) displacing a suspension of polyethylene particles (diameter 0.625 $\pm$ 0.4 mm) in the same oil in the cell from (a) (indicted times are from the start of the experiment); particle volume fraction is 25 %, oil is injected at the flow rate of 3.62 ml min–1. Images supplied by R. Luo.