Impact of boiling liquid droplets: Vapor entrapment suppression
Bernardo Palacios-Mu\~niz, Edgar Ortega-Roano, Yee Li (Ellis) Fan, Nayoung Kim, Devaraj van der Meer

TL;DR
This study investigates how boiling liquids impact droplet behavior, revealing that vapor entrapment can be suppressed under certain conditions, which affects impact pressures and has implications for cryogenic liquid handling.
Contribution
The paper introduces an experimental and modeling approach to understand droplet impact dynamics of boiling liquids, highlighting vapor suppression effects not previously documented.
Findings
Vapor entrapment can be completely suppressed during impact.
Impact speed and vapor conditions influence vapor entrapment.
Numerical simulations agree well with experimental results.
Abstract
There hardly is a fluid mechanics phenomenon attracting more attention than the impact of a droplet, due to its undeniable beauty, many applications and the numerous challenges it poses. One of the crucial factors turns out to be the cushioning effect of the gas surrounding the droplet. This fact, together with the observation that almost all of the relevant literature was done in air, triggers the question what would happen when the liquid was a boiling liquid, i.e., a liquid in thermal equilibrium with its own vapor, as is the case during transport of cryogenic liquids such as liquid hydrogen. To investigate precisely this question, we experimentally generate droplets in thermodynamical equilibrium with their own vapor, even before impact, such that minute energy exchanges of the droplet with its surroundings can trigger phase change. Using a frustrated total internal reflection (TIR)…
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