Pinch-off of underwater air bubbles with up--down asymmetry
Daniel C. Herbst

TL;DR
This study investigates the transient behavior of underwater air bubble pinch-off with initial up-down asymmetry, revealing that asymmetries quickly become symmetric and influence subsequent bubble dynamics.
Contribution
It provides detailed simulations of asymmetric bubble necks, showing how initial asymmetries evolve into symmetric singularities and affect bubble breakup processes.
Findings
Asymmetries quickly become symmetric during pinch-off.
The symmetric singularity is a blend of initial top and bottom shapes.
Adjusting airflow tunes the asymmetry weighting factor.
Abstract
Topological singularities occur in a broad range of physical systems, including collapsing stars and pinching fluid interfaces. They are important for being able to concentrate energy into a small region. Underwater air bubbles in particular appear in many practical applications, including new technologies to reduce skin drag on cargo ships. Previous theories show that just before an air bubble pinches off, the neck looks like a cylinder at its very smallest point. Unusually, however, the neck approaches this shape so gradually that the theoretical cylinder solution is not reached in practice; the singularity spends its entire lifetime in a transient phase. Therefore, in order to understand the evolution, we study the transient effects in detail. This paper details the simulation results of bubbles with initial conditions far from the cylindrical solution: squat, up--down asymmetric…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFluid Dynamics and Heat Transfer · Pickering emulsions and particle stabilization · Surface Modification and Superhydrophobicity
