Splash wave and crown breakup after disc impact on a liquid surface
Ivo R. Peters, Devaraj van der Meer, J. M. Gordillo

TL;DR
This study investigates the impact of a disc on a liquid surface, analyzing splash wave formation, crown breakup, and forces involved, highlighting the critical Weber number for crown splash and the role of air in the process.
Contribution
It introduces a combined experimental, numerical, and theoretical analysis of splash dynamics, identifying the Rayleigh-Taylor instability as key to crown breakup and modeling the air cushion effects.
Findings
Crown splash occurs when $We > 140$ and $Bo_{tip} > 1$.
Flow near the disc edge exhibits Weber-number-dependent self-similarity.
Air entrainment influences splash velocity and force, limiting self-similar behavior.
Abstract
In this paper we analyze the impact of a circular disc on a free surface using experiments, potential flow numerical simulations and theory. We focus our attention both on the study of the generation and possible breakup of the splash wave created after the impact and on the calculation of the force on the disc. We have experimentally found that drops are only ejected from the rim located at the top part of the splash --giving rise to what is known as the crown splash-- if the impact Weber number exceeds a threshold value . We explain this threshold by defining a local Bond number based on the rim deceleration and its radius of curvature, with which we show using both numerical simulations and experiments that a crown splash only occurs when , revealing that the rim disrupts due to a Rayleigh-Taylor instability. Neglecting the…
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