Pinch-off of bubbles in a polymer solution
The formation of gas bubbles in a liquid occurs in various engineering processes, such as during foam generation or agitation and mixing in bubbly flows. A challenge in describing the initial formation of a gas bubble is due to the singular behavior at pinch-off. Past experiments in Newtonian fluids...
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Zusammenfassung: | The formation of gas bubbles in a liquid occurs in various engineering
processes, such as during foam generation or agitation and mixing in bubbly
flows. A challenge in describing the initial formation of a gas bubble is due
to the singular behavior at pinch-off. Past experiments in Newtonian fluids
have shown that the minimum neck radius follows a power-law evolution shortly
before the break-up. The exponent of the power-law depends on the viscosity of
the surrounding Newtonian liquid, and ranges from 0.5 for low viscosity to 1
for large viscosity. However, bubble formation in a viscoelastic polymer
solution remains unclear, and in particular, if the evolution is still captured
by a power-law and how the exponent varies with the polymer concentration. In
this study, we use high-speed imaging to analyze the bubble pinch-off in
solutions of polymers. We characterize the time evolution of the neck radius
when varying the concentration and thus the characteristic relaxation time and
describe the influence of viscoelasticity on the bubble pinch-off. Our results
reveal that the presence of polymers does not influence the thinning until the
latter stages, when their presence in sufficient concentration delays the
pinch-off. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2209.06190 |