The steady propagation of an air finger into a rectangular tube

The steady propagation of an air finger into a fluid-filled tube of uniform rectangular cross-section is investigated. This paper is primarily focused on the influence of the aspect ratio, α, on the flow properties, but the effects of a transverse gravitational field are also considered. The three-d...

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Published inJournal of fluid mechanics Vol. 614; pp. 173 - 195
Main Authors DE LÓZAR, ALBERTO, JUEL, ANNE, HAZEL, ANDREW L.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Cambridge, UK Cambridge University Press 10.11.2008
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Summary:The steady propagation of an air finger into a fluid-filled tube of uniform rectangular cross-section is investigated. This paper is primarily focused on the influence of the aspect ratio, α, on the flow properties, but the effects of a transverse gravitational field are also considered. The three-dimensional interfacial problem is solved numerically using the object-oriented multi-physics finite-element library oomph-lib and the results agree with our previous experimental results (de Lózar et al. Phys. Rev. Lett. vol. 99, 2007, article 234501) to within the ±1% experimental error. At a fixed capillary number Ca (ratio of viscous to surface-tension forces) the pressure drops across the finger tip and relative finger widths decrease with increasing α. The dependence of the wet fraction m (the relative quantity of liquid that remains on the tube walls after the propagation of the finger) is more complicated: m decreases with increasing α for low Ca but it increases with α at high Ca. Our results also indicate that the system is approximately quasi-two-dimensional for α ≥ 8, when we obtain quantitative agreement with McLean & Saffman's two-dimensional model for the relative finger width as a function of the governing parameter 1/B = 12α2 Ca. The action of gravity causes an increase in the pressure drops, finger widths and wet fractions at fixed capillary number. In particular, when the Bond number (ratio of gravitational to surface-tension forces) is greater than one the finger lifts off the bottom wall of the tube leading to dramatic increases in the finger width and wet fraction at a given Ca. For α ≥ 3 a previously unobserved flow regime has been identified in which a small recirculation flow is situated in front of the finger tip, shielding it from any contaminants in the flow. In addition, for α ≳ 2 the capillary number, Cac, above which global recirculation flows disappear has been observed to follow the simple empirical law: Cac2/3α = 1.21.
Bibliography:ArticleID:00345
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PII:S0022112008003455
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ISSN:0022-1120
1469-7645
DOI:10.1017/S0022112008003455