Impact of the history force on the motion of droplets in shaken liquids
Frederik R. Gareis, Walter Zimmermann

TL;DR
This paper investigates how the Basset-Boussinesq history force affects droplet motion in shaken liquids, revealing significant impacts in transitional flow regimes and providing new analytical insights.
Contribution
It derives comprehensive velocity and force expressions including the history force for unsteady Stokes flows around droplets and bubbles, highlighting its importance in certain regimes.
Findings
BBH can reduce droplet deflection amplitude by over 60% in transitional regimes.
Derived scaling law for displacement amplitude in low-frequency limit.
BBH effects are more pronounced for light particles and bubbles than for heavy droplets.
Abstract
Droplets, solid particles, and gas bubbles in unsteady flows experience the Basset-Boussinesq history force (BBH) in addition to steady viscous drag, added mass, and buoyancy. Although physically relevant, the BBH term is often neglected because its inclusion is analytically and numerically demanding. To assess when this approximation fails, we revisit unsteady Stokes flows around spherical droplets of finite viscosity and derive, from first principles, the velocity fields and hydrodynamic forces, including both the classical rigid-particle limit and the free-slip (zero-viscosity) bubble limit. The resulting expressions also encompass cases with time-dependent bubble radii. We further illustrate how the BBH force arises from transient, diffusion-driven vortex structures around accelerating particles. Applying these results to droplets or particles in horizontally shaken liquids…
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