Vaporization dynamics of a super-heated water-in-oil droplet: modeling and numerical solution
Muhammad Saeed Saleem, Michel Versluis, Guillaume Lajoinie

TL;DR
This paper develops a coupled semi-analytical model to study the vaporization dynamics of superheated water-in-oil droplets, analyzing the effects of thermodynamics, heat transfer, and droplet size on vapor bubble growth.
Contribution
It introduces a novel coupled modeling approach that integrates bubble dynamics with thermodynamics and heat transfer, validated against classical analytical models.
Findings
Vaporization rate decreases with increased thermal diffusivity at low superheating.
Complete vaporization occurs without thermal diffusion influence at high superheating.
Bubble overshoot behavior depends on droplet size and superheat degree.
Abstract
The study of vapor bubble growth following droplet vaporization in a superheated liquid involves research areas such as hydrodynamics, heat transfer, mass transfer, and thermodynamics. The interplay between these multiscale aspects is strongly dependent on the geometry, the thermodynamic response, and the local physical properties of the system. To understand the role of each aspect of this complex mechanism we model super-heated droplet vaporization by coupling the equation of motion for bubble growth with the thermodynamics of phase change and heat transfer through the convection-diffusion equation. The semi-analytical model is validated with the analytical description for vapor bubble growth dominated either by inertia (Rayleigh) or by thermal diffusion (Plesset-Zwick), depending on droplet radius and degree of superheat. The effect of a mismatch of the thermal properties between the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFluid Dynamics and Heat Transfer · Cyclone Separators and Fluid Dynamics · Aerosol Filtration and Electrostatic Precipitation
