2008 Annual Meeting
(186m) Migration and Deformation of Droplets and Bubbles Rising in a Wall Bounded Shear Flow at Small and Finite Reynolds Numbers
Authors
In the present study we investigate the migration and deformation of droplets and bubbles in a wall-bounded linear shear flow via experiments, analytical predictions, and computational solutions in the Stokes-flow limit. An apparatus in which a CCD camera and a microscope follow the rising bubble are used for Reynolds numbers less than 5; this apparatus allows us to determine accurately the bubble radius contour and rising speed, together with the distance between the bubble and the wall. The computational solutions are based on our three-dimensional fully-implicit interfacial spectral boundary element algorithm.
The effects of the interfacial deformation become significant when the viscosity of the suspending liquid is large enough. In this regime, we determine the shape of the drops/bubbles and the deformation-induced transverse force. Our experimental and computational findings are in good agreement while the theoretical prediction of Magnaudet, Takagi and Legendre (JFM, 2003) is found to predict accurately the deformation but to severely underpredict the deformation-induced lift force.