1. Introduction
The deformation of thin liquid films has been investigated for more than a century (Bénard Reference Bénard1900; Rayleigh Reference Rayleigh1916), owing to their importance in a wide range of natural phenomena (Simpson Reference Simpson1982; Fink & Griffiths Reference Fink and Griffiths1990; McGraw & Wong Reference McGraw and Wong1996; Grotberg & Jensen Reference Grotberg and Jensen2004; Hewitt, Balmforth & Bruyn Reference Hewitt, Balmforth and Bruyn2015) and engineering applications (Oron, Davis & Bankoff Reference Oron, Davis and Bankoff1997; Craster & Matar Reference Craster and Matar2009; Backholm et al. Reference Backholm, Benzaquen, Salez, Raphaël and Dalnoki-Veress2014; Zheng et al. Reference Zheng, Fontelos, Shin and Stone2018b). To date, solutions to the thin-film problem have focused on boundary conditions describing infinite films (Gjevik Reference Gjevik1970; Deissler & Oron Reference Deissler and Oron1992), periodic films (Williams & Davis Reference Williams and Davis1982; Frumkin & Oron Reference Frumkin and Oron2016; Chappell & O'Dea Reference Chappell and O'Dea2020) or those that give rise to self-similar solutions (Backholm et al. Reference Backholm, Benzaquen, Salez, Raphaël and Dalnoki-Veress2014; Dallaston et al. Reference Dallaston, Tseluiko, Zheng, Fontelos and Kalliadasis2017; Zheng et al. Reference Zheng, Fontelos, Shin, Dallaston, Tseluiko, Kalliadasis and Stone2018a,Reference Zheng, Fontelos, Shin and Stoneb). Surprisingly, despite the fact that a large number of applications and phenomena involve films that are pinned on impermeable boundaries, analytical modelling of this fundamental case has been overlooked. While existing solutions provide general insight into the thin-film dynamics, the non-penetration conditions at the boundaries of finite domains, together with pinning conditions, eliminate the self-adjointness of the governing equations and alter the dynamic response of the system in a manner that existing models fail to capture.
Among the engineering applications of thin films in close domains, one of the most active fields of research is adaptive optics, where interfacial deformations can be leveraged to create smooth optical elements (Brown et al. Reference Brown, Wells, Newton and McHale2009; Banerjee et al. Reference Banerjee, Rajaeipour, Ataman and Zappe2018; Eshel et al. Reference Eshel, Frumkin, Nice, Luria, Ferdman, Opatovski, Gommed, Shusteff, Shechtman and Bercovici2021; Zhao, Sauter & Zappe Reference Zhao, Sauter and Zappe2021). Another emerging application is in the field of reconfigurable microfluidics (Paratore et al. Reference Paratore, Bacheva, Bercovici and Kaigala2022), where thin liquid films could be used to dynamically deform the surface of a thin membrane of a microfluidic chip, in order to control its functionality in real time. The film dynamics in such applications can be described by the same set of equations, whether a liquid-fluid or a liquid-membrane interface is used (Hosoi, Mahadevan & Peeling Reference Hosoi and Mahadevan2004; Kodio, Griffiths & Vella Reference Kodio, Griffiths and Vella2017; Boyko et al. Reference Boyko, Eshel, Gommed, Gat and Bercovici2019, Reference Boyko, Ilssar, Bercovici and Gat2020). The ability to design such devices, predict their performance and understand their fundamental limitations, would greatly benefit from a theoretical framework that allows their analysis.
We here present a combined theoretical and experimental study of the dynamics of a thin liquid film that is pinned at the boundaries of an impermeable finite domain, and subjected to a normal stress distribution at its liquid-air interface. We provide a time-dependent closed-form analytical solution for the linearized evolution problem, which is non-self-adjoint. We compare this solution with existing solutions for the same configuration but with self-adjoint boundary conditions and show that, while the initial dynamics is identical, the difference in boundary conditions quickly affects the entire domain, and the response time of the system. To experimentally illustrate the dynamics and to validate the model, we developed a set-up that enables high-frame-rate measurements of microscale deformations based on digital holography. We use this set-up to investigate the deformation of a thin liquid film actuated by an array of electrodes imposing a dielectrophoretic (DEP) force on the interface (Gabay et al. Reference Gabay, Paratore, Boyko, Ramos, Gat and Bercovici2021), showing good agreement to the theory.
2. Analytical model
Figure 1 presents an illustration of the investigated configuration. Consider a shallow chamber of depth ${\tilde{h}_0}$ and length ${\tilde{l}_c}$ filled with a Newtonian liquid of mass density $\tilde{\rho }$, dynamic viscosity $\tilde{\mu }$ and volume $\tilde{V}$. The liquid-air interface has a surface tension $\tilde{\gamma }$ and is subjected to a normal force distribution $\tilde{f}(\tilde{x},\tilde{t})$ that induces a spatio-temporal deformation of the interface, $\tilde{h}(\tilde{x},\tilde{t})$. Under the assumptions of shallow geometry $({\tilde{h}_0} \ll {\tilde{l}_c})$ and negligible fluid inertia, the Navier–Stokes equations reduce to the lubrication equations
where $(\tilde{u},\tilde{w})$ are the velocity components in the $\tilde{x}$ and $\tilde{z}$ directions respectively, and $\tilde{p}$ is the fluidic pressure. We marked the derivative with respect to x of a multivariable function, $g(x,z)$, as ${g_x}$. Requiring no slip at the bottom surface, a stress balance at the free surface and utilizing the kinematic boundary condition, the equations can be further simplified to the Reynolds equation, (Oron et al. Reference Oron, Davis and Bankoff1997; Leal Reference Leal2007)
Under the longwave approximation (linear curvature), the fluidic pressure, $\tilde{p}$, is given by
where the first term on the right-hand side is the hydrostatic pressure, the second one is the capillary pressure associated with the curvature of the interface, the third one is the normal stress distribution on the interface and $\tilde{C}$ is a constant. We denote the film deformation as $\tilde{d}(\tilde{x},\tilde{t}) = \tilde{h}(\tilde{x},\tilde{t}) - {\tilde{h}_0}$, and define the non-dimensional quantities $t = \tilde{t}/\tilde{\tau }$, $x = \tilde{x}/({\tilde{l}_c}/2)$, $d = \tilde{d}/{\tilde{h}_0}$, $f = \tilde{f}/\tilde{F}$. By further assuming small deformations, $d \ll 1$, we obtain the non-dimensional linearized evolution equation for the deformation
where $Bo = \tilde{\rho }\tilde{g}\tilde{l}_c^2/4\tilde{\gamma }$ is the Bond number, $\varPi = \tilde{F}\tilde{l}_c^2/4\tilde{\gamma }{\tilde{h}_0}$ represents the non-dimensional interfacial force magnitude and the resulting time scale is $\tilde{\tau } = 3\tilde{\mu }\tilde{l}_c^4/16\tilde{h}_0^3\tilde{\gamma }$.
At the boundaries we require the liquid to be pinned,
as well as no penetration through the boundaries, i.e. $u(x ={\pm} 1,t) = 0$. Integrating the x-momentum equation (2.1b) with respect to $\tilde{z}$, yields $\tilde{u} = {\tilde{p}_{\tilde{x}}}(1/2\tilde{\mu })({\tilde{z}^2}/{\tilde{h}^2} - 2(\tilde{z}/\tilde{h}))$, which translates the no-penetration boundary conditions to ${\tilde{p}_{\tilde{x}}} = 0$ at the chamber edges. Applying this requirement to (2.3), yields the following boundary condition on the deformation:
These boundary conditions are accompanied by an arbitrary initial condition, $d(x,t = 0) = {d_0}(x)$.
A straightforward approach for solving the system (2.4) with boundary conditions (2.5) and (2.6) is by separation of variables. However, as we detail here, this set of boundary conditions is responsible for transforming the system into a non-self-adjoint one, requiring special treatment in the separation of variables procedure. Equations (2.7)–(2.13) follow the standard procedure for separation of variables, yet we present it explicitly for completeness and consistency with the derivation in (2.14)–(2.19), where we construct the solution based on the adjoint operator.
We first homogenize the boundary conditions by expressing the deformation as $d(x,t) = \hat{d}(x,t) + P(x,t)$, $P(x,t)$ is the homogenizing function that should be selected as a polynomial of sufficient degree in x such that the source terms will vanish from all boundary conditions, yielding the system
A compact and convenient homogenizing function can be constructed from a third-order polynomial,
which is valid for any Bond number except $Bo = 0,3$. To cover these two specific cases, a fourth-order polynomial can be constructed.
Next, by separation of variables, we suggest a solution in the form of $\hat{d}(x,t) = X(x)T(t)$ and substitute it into the homogeneous form of (2.7), which yields
The eigenvalue problem, (2.9), followed by the set of boundary conditions
where each prime denotes a derivation with respect to the single variable of the function. The solution of the system (2.9) and (2.10) is given by
where
The eigenvalues are calculated from two transcendental equations, one for each set of eigenfunctions respectively
We note that all eigenfunctions have a zero spatial integral, except for the zero eigenfunction that corresponds to a steady state solution for a non-actuated system, and its integral sets the volume in the chamber.
The eigenfunctions (2.11) are non-orthogonal to one another, which is an indication of the non-self-adjointness of the system. Nonetheless, we can proceed by using the biorthogonality relation of the system with its adjoint system, $\langle L[X],Y\rangle = \langle X,{L^ + }[Y]\rangle$, where $\langle U,V\rangle = \int_{ - 1}^1 {UV\,\textrm{d}\kern0.06em x} $ is the basic inner product, L is the original differential operator, ${L^ + }$ is the Lagrange adjoint differential operator and X and Y are their respective solutions. We define the spatial differential operator from (2.9) as $L[X] = {X^{(4)}} - BoX^{\prime\prime}$. Since this spatial differential operator has constant real coefficients and only even derivatives, we are guaranteed that the Lagrange adjoint operator, ${L^ + }$, is identical to L (Coddington & Levinson Reference Coddington and Levinson1955). Explicitly expanding the biorthogonality relation while integrating by parts and using the boundary conditions (2.10), yields
which can hold only if $Y^{\prime}({\pm} 1) = Y^{\prime\prime}({\pm} 1) = 0$, thus defining the complementary boundary conditions for Y. These conditions are clearly different from those for X, (2.10), and thus the problem is not self-adjoint.
The solution for the adjoint system is given by
The transcendental equations for the two sets of eigenvalues (for odd and even $n$) are identical to those of the original system, and thus the eigenvalues are the same. The solution to the deformation can now be constructed by substituting the separation of variables expression, i.e. $\hat{d}(x,t) = \sum\nolimits_{n = 0}^\infty {{X_n}(x){T_n}(t)}$, to the non-homogenous equation, (2.7), yielding
where
Multiplying equation (2.16) by ${Y_m}$ and integrating over the domain with respect to x, as well as using the initial condition in (2.7), yields
Thus, the solution for the deformation is given by $d(x,t) = \sum\nolimits_{n = 0}^\infty {{T_n}(t){X_n}(x)} + P(x,t)$.
For a general function $g(x)$ the series expansion by the system eigenfunctions is given by
We note that, since our system has real and constant coefficients as well as homogenous boundary conditions, and since its eigenvalues are real with no duplicity, we are guaranteed that the eigenfunctions of both the original and the adjoint systems form a complete set (Coddington & Levinson Reference Coddington and Levinson1955).
3. Dynamics of the non-self-adjoint closed-chamber system and comparison with self-adjoint periodic and open-chamber systems
In this section we present the behaviour of a thin liquid film within a closed chamber and compare it with classical solutions for self-adjoint configurations such as periodic and open-chamber problems (solutions for the self-adjoint problems in Appendix A). Table 1 lists the boundary conditions for each of these cases. In the closed-chamber problem (‘Closed’) the liquid is pinned at both edges and the side walls of the chamber are impermeable. In the open-chamber problem (‘Open’) the liquid is also pinned, but is free to flow in and out of the chamber (i.e. the total volume in the chamber can vary in time). In the periodic case (‘Periodic’), there is no physical chamber, but the boundary conditions define a domain where the film deformation and its derivatives at one end are equal to their values at the other end. For simplicity, we consider here the case of Bo = 0, but solutions for other Bond values are readily available and do not introduce a fundamental change in behaviour.
Figure 2 presents the solutions of the deformation for all three systems, at different times, for a harmonic $(\,f = 0.5[1 - \cos (10{\rm \pi} x)])$, and for a Gaussian $(\,f = exp [ - 0.5{(x + 0.85)^2}/{0.05^2}])$ force distribution with an initially flat interface, ${d_0}(x) = 0$. At early times, for both actuations, the deformation of the liquid-air interface is roughly the same for all systems. However, with time, deviations begin to emerge from the boundaries inward.
We note that the harmonic force is strictly positive. In the Open case, which allows for liquid influx, we see that this positive force results in ‘ballooning’ of the film and dominance of the lowest wavenumber. In contrast, in the Closed and Periodic systems, mass conservation does not allow for such inflation and the deformation follows the wavenumber of the force. Another key difference between the systems is that the amplitude of the deformation in the Open system is significantly larger (note the two different y-axes in figures 2d.l and 2e.l). For the localized force, the deformation in the Closed system resembles that of the Open system (although the former is mass conserving, and the latter is not). The most significant difference is seen here in comparison with the Periodic system in which the film height at the boundary is not fixed, resulting in much greater deformation (albeit mass conserving, i.e. both positive and negative deformations are accentuated). Thus, we can see from the results that neither the Open nor the Periodic formulations can correctly model the dynamics of a Closed system.
Figure 2 shows that the Open, Closed and Periodic systems reach a steady state at different times. In figure 2, the localized actuation (right column) triggers a range of system eigenfunctions, and the time to steady state scales as ${\lambda ^{ - 4}}$, where $\lambda $ is the first (slowest) eigenvalue. The eigenvalues of the system are of course dependent on its boundary conditions. For example, at $Bo = 0$, the time scales for steady state in the Open, Closed and Periodic systems are respectively $\tilde{\tau }{(2/{\rm \pi})^4}$, $\tilde{\tau }{(1/2.37)^4}$ and $\tilde{\tau }{(1/{\rm \pi})^4}$. i.e. the Closed system is 5-fold faster than the Open system, but 3-fold slower than the Periodic system. Thus, solving for the accurate eigenvalues, meaning using the correct boundary conditions of the system is crucial in order to properly predict the system dynamics.
4. Effect of Bond number on system dynamics: response time and deformation magnitude
In this section we investigate the relation between the Bond number and both the response time of the system and the magnitude of the deformation at steady state. The liquid pressure is constant at steady state, thus substituting the non-dimensional parameters defined in (2.4) into (2.3) yields
where C is a constant that depends on the liquid volume. For the case of large Bond numbers, $Bo \gg 1$, the deformation can be written as $d \approx \varPi f/Bo + \textrm{const}\textrm{.}$ We note that this equation holds only sufficiently far from the chamber edges; close to the edges, the requirement for mass conservation together with pinning conditions may result in significant curvatures, i.e. non-negligible ${d_{xx}}$.
While $\tilde{\tau }$ was conveniently defined in (2.4) as being independent of the Bond number, the response time of the system is in fact strongly influenced by it, as indicated by the relation between the eigenvalues and the Bond number in (2.11). This influence is further enhanced through the quartic dependence of the time scale on the system eigenvalues, ${\lambda _n}$. The eigenvalues can be obtained by solving a pair of transcendental equations (2.13), for the odd and the even eigenvalues
The solid lines in figure 3 present the dependence of the resulting non-dimensional response time, ${\lambda ^{ - 4}}$, on Bo. For large Bond numbers, the asymptotic solutions for the eigenvalues are simply ${\lambda _1} = \sqrt {{\rm \pi}/2} B{o^{1/4}}$ and ${\lambda _2} = \sqrt {\rm \pi}B{o^{1/4}}$, and are indicated by the black and the grey dashed lines, respectively. For clarity, the square, circle, and x markers indicate the time scale at specific Bond numbers listed in the figure's legend. Clearly, the effect of Bo can be quite significant; the same system at Bo = 0 would have a response time 84-fold slower than the same system at $Bo = 1000$.
5. Experimental validation
5.1. Experimental set-up
To experimentally study the dynamics of thin-film deformation, we fabricated a shallow fluidic chamber with embedded electrodes which can impose a DEP force on the interface of a thin liquid film resting in the chamber. The chamber is 4 mm long, 8 mm wide and 50 μm deep (as shown in figure 4a). We filled it with 1.6 μl of silicone oil which has a mass density of $\tilde{\rho } = 970\;\textrm{kg}\;{\textrm{m}^{ - \textrm{3}}}$, surface tension of $\tilde{\gamma } = 21 \times {10^{ - 3}}\;\textrm{N}\;{\textrm{m}^{ - 1}}$ and electric permittivity of $\tilde{\varepsilon } = 2.7{\tilde{\varepsilon }_0}$, where ${\tilde{\varepsilon }_0}$ is the permittivity of free space. The bottom of the chamber is patterned with an array of 200 μm wide parallel electrodes, gapped by 200 μm edge to edge. By introducing a sinusoidal electric potential difference to the electrodes (500 Vpp, 10 kHz), the resulting localized electric field imposes DEP forces on the oil-air interface and deforms it. Figure 4(b) presents the digital holographic microscope (Cuche, Marquet & Depeursinge Reference Cuche, Marquet and Depeursinge1999) we used to observe the time-dependent deformation of the interface. For each experiment, we initially acquire the baseline surface topography prior to activation of the electric field, and then subtract it from all subsequent measurements.
5.2. Experimental results
Figure 5 compares the experimental measurements with an analytical solution based on (2.4). The analytical solution is obtain using the force distribution presented in figure 5(a), corresponding to the DEP force on a liquid-air interface from periodic electrodes (Gabay et al. Reference Gabay, Paratore, Boyko, Ramos, Gat and Bercovici2021). Figure 5(b–f) presents the evolution of the film in time, showing the gradual appearance of the different spatial modes. At very early times (0.2 ms) the highest spatial frequency is dominant, and the ‘tooth’-shaped peaks of the force distribution are also clearly observable in the analytical solution for the deformation. At 2 ms, the model and the experimental measurements agree well and show that the tenth even mode of the system has grown significantly (note the change in scale from nm to μm) and dominates the solution. The amplitude of the periodic deformation steadily increases, until at 37 ms a new qualitative change appears, initially in the form of a larger amplitude wave that penetrates from the boundaries. This is predicted well by the analytical model in good agreement with the experiments. By 3.55 s, the entire central region of the liquid has risen at the expense of the edges. The results continue to show good agreement, although some asymmetry begins to appear in the experimental measurements, resulting in slightly larger quantitative deviations. This is likely due to an additional low spatial frequency of the force distribution in the experiment that is not captured by the analytical force model, and which therefore appears only at long times. At 100 s the system has achieved its steady state. The deformation at the centre of the chamber is strictly positive. The overall shape and multitude of spatial frequencies is captured well by the theory, although quantitative differences, particularly on the right side of the chamber, are now evident.
We note that figure 5(b) (representing the deformation at 0.2 ms, or $t = 5 \times {10^{ - 8}}$ in non-dimensional time) does not include experimental results, as this time scale was too short for our imaging system to capture. To overcome this limitation, we conducted an additional experiment using silicone oil with a kinematic viscosity five times higher (1000 cSt) than the one presented in figure 5 (200 cSt). Additionally, we reduced the liquid volume, resulting in a thinner film. Both modifications increased the hydrodynamic resistance of the system and consequently led to an order of magnitude slower dynamics such that t = 2.44 × 10−8 corresponds to 2 ms. Despite the reduced liquid volume, the liquid remained pinned at the edges of the chamber, resulting in initial conditions where the film had a bowl shape with a height of 50 μm at the edges and approximately 20 μm at the centre of the chamber. We compared the experimental measurements with an analytical solution assuming a film with a uniform height of 30 μm, which corresponds to the average film thickness in the chambers.
In figure 6(a), we present the force distribution at the interface, characterized by ‘tooth'-shaped peaks with the smallest wavelength in the system, arising from the transition region between adjacent electrodes. As discussed in § 3, large spatial wavenumbers are associated with a rapid temporal response. To isolate these features, we need to focus on short times. Figure 6(b–f) depicts the deformation of the film at different time points. At 2 ms, only the highest spatial frequency is visible, in good agreement with the analytical prediction. By 22 ms, a longer wavelength becomes distinctly visible and, as time progresses, it becomes the dominant feature of the deformation.
6. Concluding remarks
Thin liquid films are found in endless applications such as spin coating, self-healing and printing technologies, where infinite boundary conditions are appropriate for describing the film dynamics. However, there is an entire class of problems that inherently rely on no-penetration boundary conditions. For example, in liquid-based actuators, such as the ones used for adaptive optics (Banerjee et al. Reference Banerjee, Rajaeipour, Ataman and Zappe2018), enclosed chambers with a fixed amount of liquid are naturally the most common implementation. Banerjee et al. have already shown the use of a membrane suspended over a thin liquid film as a mechanism for achieving freeform optical corrections with up to fourth degree Zernike polynomials. However, the performance of such devices could not be predicted a priori, as no theory was available. The model we developed here provides insight into such systems and reveals the underlying eigenfunctions and their individual and collective dynamics. For diffractive optical components, the variations in surface topography are of the order of a wavelength, and thus the solution in the small deformation regime is suitable. Clearly, for larger deformations the nonlinear equation must be considered and would yield different quantitative results, but it is reasonable to expect that the boundary conditions would have a dominant effect as well. While our derivations focused on a free interface, they directly apply to the case of a membrane under dominant tension, and could also be readily extended to account for elastic bending. However, in order to quantitatively predict the response of actuation devices, the theory must be extended to two-dimensional domains.
The Closed system's boundary conditions affect both the shape of the liquid film for a long time scale and the characteristic time scales required to achieve steady state. While obtaining the shape of the interface for the closed system requires solving the adjoint problem, the time scales can be readily obtained from solving the transcendental equation of the original operator. The time scale analysis shows that the Closed system is 5-fold faster than the Open system and 3-fold slower than the Periodic one. We further showed that neither the open nor the periodic solutions can reasonably predict the deformation of the thin liquid film for general actuations. Another set of boundary conditions that is often used in the study of thin-film dynamics is that of an infinite film. We did not explicitly consider this case as it's a subset of an Open system where the domain size is stretched to infinity. It thus suffers from the same issues as the open case, namely dominance of low wavenumber eigenfunctions (‘ballooning’) at long times.
In figure 3 we presented the effect of Bond number on the eigenvalues of the of system, representing the non-dimensional time scale of the corresponding eigenfunctions. The figure shows that increasing the Bond number increases the eigenvalues and shortens the response time. However, to understand the effect of the physical parameters on the response time of the system we must consider the dimensional time scale, $\tilde{t} \propto \tilde{\tau }{\lambda ^{ - 4}}$. The effect of density changes, $\tilde{\rho }$, is straightforward as it appears only in the dependence of $\lambda $ on Bo. However, an increase in surface tension $\tilde{\gamma }$ results in a decrease in time scale through $\tilde{\tau }$ and an increase in time scale through Bo. At low Bo, the $\tilde{\tau }$ dependence dominates and increasing the surface tension will decrease the time scale. At large Bond numbers, the increase in time scale through $\tilde{\tau }$ will balance its decrease through the Bond number and the system becomes insensitive to the value of the surface tension.
In our derivation we focused on the case of normal forces applied directly to the liquid-air interface and implemented it using DEP. However, for other actuation mechanisms such as those that dictate a slip velocity electro-osmotic flow (EOF) or an interface velocity (thermocapillary flow), the differential operator and the impermeability boundary conditions would be identical. The only thing that would differ is the right-hand side of (2.4) (Rubin et al. Reference Rubin, Tulchinsky, Gat and Bercovici2017), but that would not change the solution procedure. When dictating a spatial force/velocity distribution in combination with the evolution equation, (2.2), care should be taken not to violate the underlying assumptions, at least not at the leading order of the solution; e.g. if dictating a slip velocity, then no penetration at the domain boundaries would be fully satisfied under the lubrication approximation only if its magnitude and its spatial derivative vanish at the boundary.
Finally, we note that the non-self-adjointness is a manifestation of the mass conservation constraint on the system, and is likely to appear in other fluidic problems that are subjected to similar constraints, as well as in their numerical solutions.
Funding
We gratefully acknowledge funding from the Israel Science Foundation grant no. 2263/20. I.G. acknowledges the support of ISEF and is grateful to the Azrieli Foundation for the award of an Azrieli Fellowship.
Declaration of interests
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
Appendix A. Analytical solutions for self-adjoint problems
We here present the solution for the classical self-adjoint problem, which we compare with our non-self-adjoint solution presented in § 2.
For simplicity, we consider the equation for small deformations for the particular case of Bo = 0
for an initially flat film, $d(x,t = 0) = 0$.
The general solution using a Green's function (Polyanin Reference Polyanin2002) for (A1) and homogenous boundary conditions is given by
where ${d_0}$ is the initial deformation (zero in this case), and the source term is $\varPhi (x,t) =- \varPi {f_{xx}}$. The Green's function, $G(x,\xi ,t - \tau )$ depends on the specific eigenfunctions and eigenvalues of the problem, and therefore on its boundary conditions. In the case of an ‘Open chamber’ the liquid is pinned at its boundaries but is free to flow in and out of the chamber. The latter condition can be expressed using the pressure relation, $p = {d_{xx}} - Bo \times d + \varPi \times f$, and the pinning condition, as ${d_{xx}}({\pm} 1,t) =- \varPi f({\pm} 1,t)$. Thus, the boundary conditions can be summarized by
For the Periodic system, the boundary conditions are simply the requirement that the deformation and its derivatives up to the third order will have equal values at both edges, i.e.
where the subscripts x and i mark the ith-order derivative of the deformation with respect to x.
In order to homogenize the boundary conditions for the open case, we use a corrective polynomial function for the boundary condition, $d = v + {P_o}$, where
The Green's function for the open-chamber problem with homogenous boundary conditions in the domain [−1,1] is given by (Polyanin Reference Polyanin2002)
where ${c_m} = \left\{ \begin{array}{@{}l@{}} 1,\quad m = 2k - 1\\ \textrm{0,}\quad m = 2k \end{array} \right.$, ${s_m} = \left\{ \begin{array}{@{}l@{}} 0,\quad m = 2k - 1\\ \textrm{1,}\quad m = 2k \end{array} \right.$, k is a positive integer and the eigenvalues of the system are ${\lambda _{o,m}} = ({\rm \pi}/2)m$.
For the periodic system we obtain the Green's function
where the eigenvalues of the system are ${\lambda _{p,m}} = {\rm \pi}m$, and the subscripts $o,p$ denote the Green's functions and deformation solutions for the open and periodic systems, respectively.
Substituting (A6) and (A7) into (A2), we obtain the solutions
where the series a and b for both systems are given by,