Releasing trapped Taylor bubbles via centrifugation and inclination
Alice Marcotte, Pier Giuseppe Ledda, Valentin Buriasco, Paul Den\'e, Fran\c{c}ois Gallaire, Ludovic Keiser

TL;DR
This paper explores methods to release trapped Taylor bubbles in narrow tubes by using centrifugation and inclination, analyzing how external accelerations influence bubble mobility and thresholds for motion.
Contribution
It introduces new strategies involving tube rotation and inclination to overcome the critical conditions preventing bubble ascent in confined channels.
Findings
Experimental results align with theoretical predictions.
Rotation and inclination effectively modify bubble motion thresholds.
Practical methods to control bubble mobility in narrow environments.
Abstract
In confined systems, the entrapment of a gas volume with an equivalent spherical diameter greater than the dimension of the channel can form extended bubbles that obstruct fluid circuits and compromise performance. Notably, in sealed vertical tubes, buoyant long bubbles -- called Taylor bubbles -- cannot rise if the inner tube radius is below a critical value near the capillary length. This critical threshold for steady ascent is determined by geometric constraints related to matching the upper cap shape with the lubricating film in the elongated part of the bubble. Developing strategies to overcome this threshold and release stuck bubbles is essential for applications involving narrow liquid channels. Effective strategies involve modifying matching conditions with an external force field to facilitate bubble ascent. However, it's unclear how changes in acceleration conditions affect…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPickering emulsions and particle stabilization · Characterization and Applications of Magnetic Nanoparticles · Micro and Nano Robotics
