On a pair of interacting bubbles in planar Stokes flow

This paper presents a combined numerical and analytical investigation into various problems involving two symmetric interacting constant-pressure bubbles evolving in two-dimensional Stokes flow. The bubbles have constant surface tension on their boundaries and are taken to be in an ambient straining...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of fluid mechanics Vol. 541; no. 1; pp. 231 - 261
Main Authors CROWDY, DARREN, TANVEER, SALEH, VASCONCELOS, GIOVANI L.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Cambridge, UK Cambridge University Press 25.10.2005
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:This paper presents a combined numerical and analytical investigation into various problems involving two symmetric interacting constant-pressure bubbles evolving in two-dimensional Stokes flow. The bubbles have constant surface tension on their boundaries and are taken to be in an ambient straining flow. First, a novel numerical method based on conformal mappings is presented to compute the free-surface evolution. Then, a special class of time-evolving exact solutions to the problem is derived and used to check the numerical code. These solutions reveal that, for bubbles with shrinking area, a competition between the imposed strain and surface tension can lead to either a slit or a point as the limiting shape. Numerical solutions of fixed-area bubbles are then computed and reveal that when they are forced together by a straining flow, a thin lubrication layer forms. In the absence of surface tension, large-curvature regions develop at the bubble edges and these are smoothed out by capillary effects. Further, motivated by the viscous sintering application, a study of interaction effects on the pure surface-tension-driven shrinkage of circular bubbles is investigated and compared, in an appropriate limit, to a recently derived ‘elliptical-pore model’.
Bibliography:istex:C787C0E9EC1EF7379562BD02338089E55DC96401
ark:/67375/6GQ-BVF8C178-P
PII:S0022112005005999
ObjectType-Article-2
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-1
content type line 23
ISSN:0022-1120
1469-7645
DOI:10.1017/S0022112005005999