Viscoelastic Worthington jets & droplets produced by bursting bubbles
Ayush K. Dixit, Alexandros Oratis, Konstantinos Zinelis, Detlef Lohse, Vatsal Sanjay

TL;DR
This study uses numerical simulations to explore how viscoelastic properties of liquids influence bubble burst jets and droplet formation, revealing regimes where elastic stresses suppress or modify aerosol dispersal.
Contribution
It introduces a phase space mapping of viscoelastic effects on bubble jet dynamics, highlighting the roles of elastocapillary and Deborah numbers in droplet ejection behavior.
Findings
Elastic stresses can suppress jet formation at high $Ec$ and $De$.
Intermediate viscoelasticity can produce smaller droplets, enhancing aerosol dispersal.
Three flow regimes identified: droplet-forming jets, non-droplet jets, and no jets.
Abstract
Bubble bursting and subsequent collapse of the open cavity at free surfaces of contaminated liquids can generate aerosol droplets, facilitating pathogen transport. After film rupture, capillary waves focus at the cavity base, potentially generating fast Worthington jets that are responsible for ejecting the droplets away from the source. While extensively studied for Newtonian fluids, the influence of non-Newtonian rheology on this process remains poorly understood. Here, we employ direct numerical simulations to investigate the bubble cavity collapse in viscoelastic media, such as polymeric liquids. We find that the jet and drop formation are dictated by two dimensionless parameters: the elastocapillary number (the ratio of the elastic modulus and the Laplace pressure) and the Deborah number (the ratio of the relaxation time and the inertio-capillary timescale). We show that…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFluid Dynamics and Heat Transfer · Particle Dynamics in Fluid Flows · Pickering emulsions and particle stabilization
