The origin of diffusive transport of light in dry foams is still under
debate. In this paper, we consider the random walks of photons as they are
reflected or transmitted by liquid films according to the rules of ray optics.
The foams are approximately modeled by three-dimensional Voronoi tessellations
with varying degree of disorder. We study two cases: a constant intensity
reflectance and the reflectance of thin films. Especially in the second case,
we find that in the experimentally important regime for the film thicknesses,
the transport-mean-free path does not significantly depend on the topological
and geometrical disorder of the Voronoi foams including the periodic Kelvin
foam. This may indicate that the detailed structure of foams is not crucial for
understanding the diffusive transport of light. Furthermore, our theoretical
values for transport-mean-free path fall in the same range as the experimental
values observed in dry foams. One can therefore argue that liquid films
contribute substantially to the diffusive transport of light in {dry} foams.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure