On viscid-inviscid interactions of a pair of bubbles rising near the wall
Kazuki Maeda, Masanobu Date, Kazuyasu Sugiyama, Shu Takagi, Yoichiro, Matsumoto

TL;DR
This study combines experiments and modeling to analyze how pairs of rising bubbles interact and cluster near walls, revealing preferred configurations and the influence of turbulence and viscosity on clustering.
Contribution
It introduces a combined experimental and stochastic modeling approach to understand bubble pair interactions and clustering mechanisms near walls.
Findings
Bubbles exhibit two preferred configurations: side-by-side at short distances and inline at longer distances.
The model identifies two interaction timescales explaining the preferred bubble arrangements.
Turbulence and viscosity significantly accelerate bubble clustering near walls.
Abstract
Series of experiments on turbulent bubbly channel flows observed bubble clusters near the wall which can change large-scale flow structures. To gain insights into clustering mechanisms, we study the interaction of a pair of spherical bubbles rising in a vertical channel through combined experiments and modeling. Experimental imaging identifies that pairwise bubbles of 1.0 mm diameter take two preferred configurations depending on their mutual distance: side-by-side positions for a short distance () and nearly inline, oblique positions for a long distance (), where is the mutual distance normalized by the bubble radius. In the model, we formulate the motions of pairwise bubbles rising at . Analytical drag and lift, and semi-empirical, spatio-temporal stochastic forcing are employed to represent the mean acceleration and the fluctuation due to turbulent agitation,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFluid Dynamics and Mixing · Fluid Dynamics and Heat Transfer · Particle Dynamics in Fluid Flows
