Tunable turbulence in driven microscale emulsions
Majid Bahraminasr, Anand Yethiraj

TL;DR
This study demonstrates a tunable microscale emulsion system where electrical conductivity controls the transition from droplet deformation to turbulence-like flows, validated by multiple measurement techniques.
Contribution
We introduce a controllable emulsion system that enables systematic exploration of electrohydrodynamic turbulence at microscale, with comprehensive validation across PIV, rheometry, and DDM.
Findings
Energy spectra exhibit power-law scaling with exponent ~5/3 at high fields.
Super-diffusive behavior observed with MSD exponent 3/2.
Transition to turbulence is tunable via electrical conductivity.
Abstract
We present a tunable, non-equilibrium oil-in-oil emulsion that serves as a model system for investigating the transition from controlled droplet deformation to multiscale flows reminiscent of turbulence. By utilizing a miscible mixture of silicone and motor oils as the continuous phase and the immiscible castor oil as the droplet phase, we isolate electrical conductivity as a single experimental control parameter, varying it by over two orders of magnitude while keeping viscosity and permittivity nearly constant. This high degree of control allows us to systematically traverse the electrohydrodynamic (EHD) phase diagram with dielectric constant and conductivity as control parameters. We validate small-deformation theory at low fields before driving the system into a regime of multiscale, unsteady flows at high fields. We employ three complementary approaches on the same system (particle…
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