Models for Instabilities of Fronts

Understanding the characteristics of interface motion and front propagation is an important feature in many scientific areas such as invasive species, avalanche, combustion, solidification and many other industrial processes. This thesis is concerned with introducing, investigating, solving and dis...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Omar, Alan Mohammed
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/60061/
_version_ 1848799719712620544
author Omar, Alan Mohammed
author_facet Omar, Alan Mohammed
author_sort Omar, Alan Mohammed
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Understanding the characteristics of interface motion and front propagation is an important feature in many scientific areas such as invasive species, avalanche, combustion, solidification and many other industrial processes. This thesis is concerned with introducing, investigating, solving and discussing some models for the front instabilities that suit the shapes of fronts observed in applications better than the Kuramoto-Sivashinsky equation. Our attention has been focused on dealing with three systems that have the growth rate proportional to |k| for small wavenumber k, where the front dynamics takes different shapes such as lobe-and-cleft patterns. These systems are the nonlocal Kuramoto-Sivashinsky (nonlocal KS), Michelson-Sivashinsky (MS) and modified Michelson-Sivashinsky (MMS) equations. In this work, we examine all three systems numerically in one and two dimensions, varying the domain size. For a small domain in one dimension, the dynamics of the front for all three systems show coarsening from initial disturbances until it reaches a stable steady-state solution with one cusp. The dynamics of the front for the MS and MMS equations in a large domain coarsens from initial disturbances until it reaches a state with a few cusps. Then this state seems to be unstable and new small cusps appear in the troughs and move toward the large cusps. The dynamics of the front for the nonlocal-KS equation in a large domain shows similar behaviour, but with a small nonlocal term is fully unstable with no coherent structure. In addition, travelling wave and heteroclinic cycle solutions between the large and small domains have been found for the nonlocal-KS equation. The dynamics of the front in two dimensions has similar behaviour to the one-dimensional case for all three systems. The most novel finding of this work is a family of analytical solutions of the MS equation in one and two dimensions.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T20:40:08Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-60061
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T20:40:08Z
publishDate 2020
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-600612025-02-28T14:49:40Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/60061/ Models for Instabilities of Fronts Omar, Alan Mohammed Understanding the characteristics of interface motion and front propagation is an important feature in many scientific areas such as invasive species, avalanche, combustion, solidification and many other industrial processes. This thesis is concerned with introducing, investigating, solving and discussing some models for the front instabilities that suit the shapes of fronts observed in applications better than the Kuramoto-Sivashinsky equation. Our attention has been focused on dealing with three systems that have the growth rate proportional to |k| for small wavenumber k, where the front dynamics takes different shapes such as lobe-and-cleft patterns. These systems are the nonlocal Kuramoto-Sivashinsky (nonlocal KS), Michelson-Sivashinsky (MS) and modified Michelson-Sivashinsky (MMS) equations. In this work, we examine all three systems numerically in one and two dimensions, varying the domain size. For a small domain in one dimension, the dynamics of the front for all three systems show coarsening from initial disturbances until it reaches a stable steady-state solution with one cusp. The dynamics of the front for the MS and MMS equations in a large domain coarsens from initial disturbances until it reaches a state with a few cusps. Then this state seems to be unstable and new small cusps appear in the troughs and move toward the large cusps. The dynamics of the front for the nonlocal-KS equation in a large domain shows similar behaviour, but with a small nonlocal term is fully unstable with no coherent structure. In addition, travelling wave and heteroclinic cycle solutions between the large and small domains have been found for the nonlocal-KS equation. The dynamics of the front in two dimensions has similar behaviour to the one-dimensional case for all three systems. The most novel finding of this work is a family of analytical solutions of the MS equation in one and two dimensions. 2020-07-24 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/60061/1/PhD%20Thesis%2C%20Alan%20Omar.pdf Omar, Alan Mohammed (2020) Models for Instabilities of Fronts. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. fluid mechanics interfaces front propagation wave motion
spellingShingle fluid mechanics
interfaces
front propagation
wave motion
Omar, Alan Mohammed
Models for Instabilities of Fronts
title Models for Instabilities of Fronts
title_full Models for Instabilities of Fronts
title_fullStr Models for Instabilities of Fronts
title_full_unstemmed Models for Instabilities of Fronts
title_short Models for Instabilities of Fronts
title_sort models for instabilities of fronts
topic fluid mechanics
interfaces
front propagation
wave motion
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/60061/