Study of air-core vortical flow structure induced by a plughole vortex
Rayhan Ahmed, Heechang Lim

TL;DR
This study investigates the formation and evolution of air-core vortical flow structures caused by plughole vortices during water drainage, revealing bubble transformations, flow regimes, and their effects in drainpipes.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of vortex-induced bubble dynamics and flow transitions in drainpipes, combining experimental observations with numerical simulations.
Findings
Surface dip initiates droplet-shaped bubbles.
Bubble transformation from droplet to donut shape occurs after separation.
Flow transitions from bubbly to slug and then to annular flow.
Abstract
This paper describes a study of the generation of a plughole vortex and its consequences in a drainpipe during drainage of water from a stationary rectangular tank. The critical and minimum depths of water above the inlet of the drainpipe, where a surface dip starts to develop for drainpipes of various diameters, were examined parametrically. This study explored the following naturally occurring phenomena arising from a plughole vortex. (i) A plughole vortex initially causes a surface dip to develop towards the inlet of the drainpipe and as the surface dip approaches the inlet of the drainpipe it creates a droplet-shaped air bubble. (ii) A unique bubble transformation, i.e., from a droplet-shaped to a donut-shaped bubble ring, occurs just after the separation of the droplet-shaped air bubble from the surface dip. (iii) The donut-shaped bubble ring flows with the drain water and…
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