104 research outputs found
Dry microfoams: Formation and flow in a confined channel
We present an experimental investigation of the agglomeration of microbubbles
into a 2D microfoam and its flow in a rectangular microchannel. Using a
flow-focusing method, we produce the foam in situ on a microfluidic chip for a
large range of liquid fractions, down to a few percent in liquid. We can
monitor the transition from separated bubbles to the desired microfoam, in
which bubbles are closely packed and separated by thin films. We find that
bubble formation frequency is limited by the liquid flow rate, whatever the gas
pressure. The formation frequency creates a modulation of the foam flow,
rapidly damped along the channel. The average foam flow rate depends
non-linearly on the applied gas pressure, displaying a threshold pressure due
to capillarity. Strong discontinuities in the flow rate appear when the number
of bubbles in the channel width changes, reflecting the discrete nature of the
foam topology. We also produce an ultra flat foam, reducing the channel height
from 250 m to 8 m, resulting in a height to diameter ration of 0.02;
we notice a marked change in bubble shape during the flow.Comment: 7 pages; 7 figures; 1 tex file+ 22 eps-file
Discrete rearranging disordered patterns, part I: Robust statistical tools in two or three dimensions
Discrete rearranging patterns include cellular patterns, for instance liquid
foams, biological tissues, grains in polycrystals; assemblies of particles such
as beads, granular materials, colloids, molecules, atoms; and interconnected
networks. Such a pattern can be described as a list of links between
neighbouring sites. Performing statistics on the links between neighbouring
sites yields average quantities (hereafter "tools") as the result of direct
measurements on images. These descriptive tools are flexible and suitable for
various problems where quantitative measurements are required, whether in two
or in three dimensions. Here, we present a coherent set of robust tools, in
three steps. First, we revisit the definitions of three existing tools based on
the texture matrix. Second, thanks to their more general definition, we embed
these three tools in a self-consistent formalism, which includes three
additional ones. Third, we show that the six tools together provide a direct
correspondence between a small scale, where they quantify the discrete
pattern's local distortion and rearrangements, and a large scale, where they
help describe a material as a continuous medium. This enables to formulate
elastic, plastic, fluid behaviours in a common, self-consistent modelling using
continuous mechanics. Experiments, simulations and models can be expressed in
the same language and directly compared. As an example, a companion paper
(Marmottant, Raufaste and Graner, joint paper) provides an application to foam
plasticity
Three-dimensional bubble clusters:Shape, packing, and growth rate
We consider three-dimensional clusters of identical bubbles packed around a
central bubble and calculate their energy and optimal shape. We obtain the
surface area and bubble pressures to improve on existing growth laws for
three-dimensional bubble clusters. We discuss the possible number of bubbles
that can be packed around a central one: the ``kissing problem'', here adapted
to deformable objects
Discrete rearranging disordered patterns, part II: 2D plasticity, elasticity and flow of a foam
The plastic flow of a foam results from bubble rearrangements. We study their
occurrence in experiments where a foam is forced to flow in 2D: around an
obstacle; through a narrow hole; or sheared between rotating disks. We describe
their orientation and frequency using a topological matrix defined in the
companion paper (Graner et al., preprint), which links them with continuous
plasticity at large scale. We then suggest a phenomenological equation to
predict the plastic strain rate: its orientation is determined from the foam's
local elastic strain; and its rate is determined from the foam's local
elongation rate. We obtain a good agreement with statistical measurements. This
enables us to describe the foam as a continuous medium with fluid, elastic and
plastic properties. We derive its constitutive equation, then test several of
its terms and predictions
Two-dimensional flow of foam around a circular obstacle: local measurements of elasticity, plasticity and flow
We investigate the two-dimensional flow of a liquid foam around circular
obstacles by measuring all the local fields necessary to describe this flow:
velocity, pressure, bubble deformations and rearrangements. We show how our
experimental setup, a quasi-2D "liquid pool" system, is adapted to the
determination of these fields: the velocity and bubble deformations are easy to
measure from 2D movies, and the pressure can be measured by exploiting a
specific feature of this system, a 2D effective compressibility. To describe
accurately bubble rearrangements, we propose a new, tensorial descriptor. All
these quantities are evaluated via an averaging procedure that we justify
showing that the fluctuations of the fields are essentially random. The flow is
extensively studied in a reference experimental case; the velocity presents an
overshoot in the wake of the obstacle, the pressure is maximum at the leading
side and minimal at the trailing side. The study of the elastic deformations
and of the velocity gradients shows that the transition between plug flow and
yielded regions is smooth. Our tensorial description of T1s highlight their
correlation both with the bubble deformations and the velocity gradients. A
salient feature of the flow, notably on the velocity and T1 repartition, is a
marked asymmetry upstream/downstream, signature of the elastic behaviour of the
foam. We show that the results do not change qualitatively when various control
parameters vary, identifying a robust quasistatic regime. These results are
discussed in the frame of the actual foam rheology literature, and we argue
that they constitute a severe test for existing rheological models, since they
capture both the elastic, plastic and fluid behaviour of the foam.Comment: 41 pages, 25 figures, submitted to Journal of Fluid Mechanics (but
not in JFM style), short version of the abstrac
Screening in two-dimensional foams
Using the Surface Evolver software, we perform numerical simulations of
point-like deformations in a two-dimensional foam. We study perturbations which
are infinitesimal or finite, isotropic or anisotropic, and we either conserve
or do not conserve the number of bubbles. We measure the displacement fields
around the perturbation. Changes in pressure decrease exponentially with the
distance to perturbation, indicating a screening over a few bubble diameters
Discrete rearranging disordered patterns: Prediction of elastic and plastic behaviour, and application to two-dimensional foams
We study the elasto-plastic behaviour of materials made of individual
(discrete) objects, such as a liquid foam made of bubbles. The evolution of
positions and mutual arrangements of individual objects is taken into account
through statistical quantities, such as the elastic strain of the structure,
the yield strain and the yield function. The past history of the sample plays
no explicit role, except through its effect on these statistical quantities.
They suffice to relate the discrete scale with the collective, global scale. At
this global scale, the material behaves as a continuous medium; it is described
with tensors such as elastic strain, stress and velocity gradient. We write the
differential equations which predict their elastic and plastic behaviour in
both the general case and the case of simple shear. An overshoot in the shear
strain or shear stress is interpreted as a rotation of the deformed structure,
which is a purely tensorial effect that exists only if the yield strain is at
least of order 0.3. We suggest practical applications, including: when to
choose a scalar formalism rather than a tensorial one; how to relax trapped
stresses; and how to model materials with a low, or a high, yield strain
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