Computational analysis of single rising bubbles influenced by soluble surfactant
Chiara Pesci, Andre Weiner, Holger Marschall, Dieter Bothe

TL;DR
This study uses advanced DNS techniques to analyze how soluble surfactants affect the dynamics of rising bubbles, providing detailed insights into interfacial phenomena and flow behavior.
Contribution
It introduces an enhanced DNS methodology with a subgrid-scale model for surfactant transport, validated against experiments, to better understand bubble dynamics influenced by soluble surfactants.
Findings
DNS accurately reproduces bubble velocity transients
Surfactants significantly modify bubble rise behavior
Quasi-steady velocity can occur without local equilibrium
Abstract
This paper presents novel insights about the influence of soluble surfactants on bubble flows obtained by Direct Numerical Simulation (DNS). Surfactants are amphiphilic compounds which accumulate at fluid interfaces and significantly modify the respective interfacial properties, influencing also the overall dynamics of the flow. With the aid of DNS local quantities like the surfactant distribution on the bubble surface can be accessed for a better understanding of the physical phenomena occurring close to the interface. The core part of the physical model consists in the description of the surfactant transport in the bulk and on the deformable interface. The solution procedure is based on an Arbitrary Lagrangian-Eulerian (ALE) Interface-Tracking method. The existing methodology was enhanced to describe a wider range of physical phenomena. A subgrid-scale (SGS) model is employed in the…
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