Experimental observation of a confined bubble moving in shear-thinning fluids
SungGyu Chun, Bingqiang Ji, Zhengyu Yang, Vinit Kumar Malik, Jie, Feng

TL;DR
This study experimentally investigates how shear-thinning non-Newtonian fluids affect the dynamics of confined bubbles, revealing reduced film thickness and altered bubble behavior compared to Newtonian fluids, with implications for engineering applications.
Contribution
It provides systematic experimental data and analysis on bubble motion in shear-thinning fluids, extending theoretical models to account for non-Newtonian rheology effects.
Findings
Film thickness decreases with shear-thinning effects.
Bubble speed is influenced and transition delays occur due to shear-thinning.
Theoretical scaling laws are validated with effective capillary number considerations.
Abstract
The motion of a long gas bubble in a confined capillary tube is ubiquitous in a wide range of engineering and biological applications. While the understanding of the deposited thin viscous film near the tube wall in Newtonian fluids is well developed, the deposition dynamics in commonly encountered non-Newtonian fluids remains much less studied. Here, we investigate the dynamics of a confined bubble moving in shear-thinning fluids with systematic experiments, varying the zero-shear-rate capillary number in the range of considering the zero-shear-rate viscosity. The thickness of the deposited liquid film, the bubble speed and the bubble front/rear menisci are measured, which are further rationalized with the recent theoretical studies based on appropriate rheological models. Compared with Newtonian fluids, the film thickness decreases for both the carboxymethyl…
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