Flow in linearly sheared two dimensional foams: from bubble to bulk scale
Gijs Katgert, Andrzej Latka, Matthias E. M\"obius, Martin van Hecke

TL;DR
This study investigates flow behaviors in two-dimensional foams, revealing how disorder, shear rate, and packing fraction influence shear banding and flow profiles, and introduces a model that captures these effects across different conditions.
Contribution
We develop a simple force balance model that explains rate-dependent and independent flow profiles in 2D foams, incorporating effects of disorder and packing fraction.
Findings
Disordered foams exhibit rate-dependent shear banding.
Ordered foams show shear banding but are rate-independent.
The model accurately predicts flow profiles across packing fractions.
Abstract
We probe the flow of two dimensional foams, consisting of a monolayer of bubbles sandwiched between a liquid bath and glass plate, as a function of driving rate, packing fraction and degree of disorder. First, we find that bidisperse, disordered foams exhibit strongly rate dependent and inhomogeneous (shear banded) velocity profiles, while monodisperse, ordered foams are also shear banded, but essentially rate independent. Second, we introduce a simple model based on balancing the averaged drag forces between the bubbles and the top plate and the averaged bubble-bubble drag forces. This model captures the observed rate dependent flows, and the rate independent flows. Third, we perform independent rheological measurements, both for ordered and disordered systems, and find these to be fully consistent with the scaling forms of the drag forces assumed in the simple model, and we see that…
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