Statistical mechanics of bubbly liquids
The dynamics of bubbles at high Reynolds numbers is studied from the viewpoint of statistical mechanics. Individual bubbles are treated as dipoles in potential flow. A virtual mass matrix of the system of bubbles is introduced, which depends on the instantaneous positions of the bubbles, and is used...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Physics of fluids (1994) 1996-04, Vol.8 (4), p.881-895 |
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creator | Yurkovetsky, Yevgeny Brady, John F. |
description | The dynamics of bubbles at high Reynolds numbers is studied from the viewpoint of statistical mechanics. Individual bubbles are treated as dipoles in potential flow. A virtual mass matrix of the system of bubbles is introduced, which depends on the instantaneous positions of the bubbles, and is used to calculate the energy of the bubbly flow as a quadratic form of the bubbles’ velocities. The energy is shown to be the system’s Hamiltonian and is used to construct a canonical ensemble partition function, which explicitly includes the total impulse of the suspension along with its energy. The Hamiltonian is decomposed into an effective potential due to the bubbles’ collective motion and a kinetic term due to the random motion about the mean. An effective bubble temperature—a measure of the relative importance of the bubbles’ relative to collective motion—is derived with the help of the impulse‐dependent partition function. Two effective potentials are shown to operate: one due to the mean motion of the bubbles, dominates at low bubble temperatures, where it leads to their grouping in flat clusters normal to the direction of the collective motion, while the other, temperature‐invariant, is due to the bubbles’ position‐dependent virtual mass and results in their mutual repulsion. Numerical evidence is presented for the existence of the effective potentials, the condensed and dispersed phases, and a phase transition. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1063/1.868869 |
format | Article |
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Individual bubbles are treated as dipoles in potential flow. A virtual mass matrix of the system of bubbles is introduced, which depends on the instantaneous positions of the bubbles, and is used to calculate the energy of the bubbly flow as a quadratic form of the bubbles’ velocities. The energy is shown to be the system’s Hamiltonian and is used to construct a canonical ensemble partition function, which explicitly includes the total impulse of the suspension along with its energy. The Hamiltonian is decomposed into an effective potential due to the bubbles’ collective motion and a kinetic term due to the random motion about the mean. An effective bubble temperature—a measure of the relative importance of the bubbles’ relative to collective motion—is derived with the help of the impulse‐dependent partition function. Two effective potentials are shown to operate: one due to the mean motion of the bubbles, dominates at low bubble temperatures, where it leads to their grouping in flat clusters normal to the direction of the collective motion, while the other, temperature‐invariant, is due to the bubbles’ position‐dependent virtual mass and results in their mutual repulsion. 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Individual bubbles are treated as dipoles in potential flow. A virtual mass matrix of the system of bubbles is introduced, which depends on the instantaneous positions of the bubbles, and is used to calculate the energy of the bubbly flow as a quadratic form of the bubbles’ velocities. The energy is shown to be the system’s Hamiltonian and is used to construct a canonical ensemble partition function, which explicitly includes the total impulse of the suspension along with its energy. The Hamiltonian is decomposed into an effective potential due to the bubbles’ collective motion and a kinetic term due to the random motion about the mean. An effective bubble temperature—a measure of the relative importance of the bubbles’ relative to collective motion—is derived with the help of the impulse‐dependent partition function. Two effective potentials are shown to operate: one due to the mean motion of the bubbles, dominates at low bubble temperatures, where it leads to their grouping in flat clusters normal to the direction of the collective motion, while the other, temperature‐invariant, is due to the bubbles’ position‐dependent virtual mass and results in their mutual repulsion. 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Individual bubbles are treated as dipoles in potential flow. A virtual mass matrix of the system of bubbles is introduced, which depends on the instantaneous positions of the bubbles, and is used to calculate the energy of the bubbly flow as a quadratic form of the bubbles’ velocities. The energy is shown to be the system’s Hamiltonian and is used to construct a canonical ensemble partition function, which explicitly includes the total impulse of the suspension along with its energy. The Hamiltonian is decomposed into an effective potential due to the bubbles’ collective motion and a kinetic term due to the random motion about the mean. An effective bubble temperature—a measure of the relative importance of the bubbles’ relative to collective motion—is derived with the help of the impulse‐dependent partition function. Two effective potentials are shown to operate: one due to the mean motion of the bubbles, dominates at low bubble temperatures, where it leads to their grouping in flat clusters normal to the direction of the collective motion, while the other, temperature‐invariant, is due to the bubbles’ position‐dependent virtual mass and results in their mutual repulsion. Numerical evidence is presented for the existence of the effective potentials, the condensed and dispersed phases, and a phase transition.</abstract><doi>10.1063/1.868869</doi><tpages>15</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record> |
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title | Statistical mechanics of bubbly liquids |
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