28 research outputs found
Rupture de bulles dans un liquide vibrés en microgravité
The response of an air bubble surrounded by a liquid in a
sealed cell submitted to vibrations was investigated
experimentally under microgravity conditions and compared
to experiments under normal gravity conditions. As in normal
gravity [1], it was observed that the bubble split into smaller
parts when the acceleration of the vibrations reached a
threshold. This threshold in microgravity is substantially
smaller than that in normal gravity. Experimental results will
be presented in terms of an acceleration based Bond number
which has been found to characterize the bubble behaviour in
the laboratory experiments [1].
Introductio
Air bubbles under vertical vibrations
This paper reports on an experimental study of the splitting instability of an air bubble a few centimetres in diameter placed in a sealed cylindrical cell filled with liquid and submitted to vertical oscillations. The response of the bubble to the oscillations is observed with a high-speed video camera. It is found that the bubble dynamics is closely associated with the acceleration of the cell Gamma. For small acceleration values, the bubble undergoes minor shape deformations. With increasing acceleration values, these deformations are amplified and for sufficiently large Gamma the bubble becomes toroidal. The bubble may then become unstable and split into smaller parts. The onset of bubble division is studied and its dependency on physical parameters such as the fluid viscosity, the fluid surface tension and the initial size of the bubble is presented. It is found that the criterion for the bubble splitting process is associated with a threshold based on the acceleration of the oscillations. Above this threshold, the number of bubbles present in the cell is observed to grow until a final steady state is reached. Data analysis reveals that the final bubble size may be characterized in terms of Bond number
Brisure de bulles dans un écoulement oscillant sur Terre et en gravité réduite
The stability of centimeter scale air bubbles is studied in quiescent suspending liquid under
an imposed oscillatory acceleration field. Experiments were performed in reduced- and normal-gravity
environments. A strong acceleration resulted in an instability leading to the breakups of the bubbles in
both gravity environments. The breakup onset was investigated and found to be characterized by a critical
acceleration acr . The influence of the liquid viscosity and the gravitational environment was studied.
Empirical correlations for the onset are presented and discussed with the intention to reveal splitting
mechanism. The inertial mechanism often deemed to cause the breakup of drops sub jected to a rapid
gas stream is shown to give explanations consistent with the experiments. A breakup criterion for both
gravitational environments is proposed through discussions from an energetic point of view