Unexpected spatial distribution of bubble rearrangements in coarsening foams
David A. Sessoms, Hugo Bissig, Agn\`es Duri, Luca Cipelletti, and, V\'eronique Trappe

TL;DR
This study uses advanced light scattering techniques to analyze the spatial and temporal distribution of bubble rearrangements in coarsening foams, revealing unexpected clustering behavior influenced by local instability.
Contribution
It introduces novel optical methods to quantify foam dynamics, uncovering the non-random spatial clustering of rearrangements and their relation to coarsening-induced strain.
Findings
Rearrangements are more likely within recently rearranged zones.
Event frequency correlates with the strain rate from coarsening.
Spatial distribution of events is non-random and clustered.
Abstract
Foams are ideal model systems to study stress-driven dynamics, as stress-imbalances within the system are continuously generated by the coarsening process, which unlike thermal fluctuations, can be conveniently quantified by optical means. However, the high turbidity of foams generally hinders the detailed study of the temporal and spatial distribution of rearrangement events, such that definite assessments regarding their contribution to the overall dynamics could not be made so far. In this paper, we use novel light scattering techniques to measure the frequency and position of events within a large sample volume. As recently reported (A. S. Gittings and D. J. Durian, Phys. Rev. E, 2008, 78, 066313), we find that the foam dynamics is determined by two distinct processes: intermittent bubble rearrangements of finite duration and a spatially homogeneous quasicontinuous process. Our…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
