Abstract
An additional distant wall is known to highly alter the jetting scenarios of wall-proximal bubbles. Here, we combine high-speed photography and axisymmetric volume of fluid (VoF) simulations to quantitatively describe its role in enhancing the micro-jet dynamics within the directed jet regime (Zeng et al., J. Fluid Mech., vol. 896, 2020, A28). Upon a favourable agreement on the bubble and micro-jet dynamics, both experimental and simulation results indicate that the micro-jet velocity increases dramatically as
$\eta$
decreases, where
$\eta =H/R_{max}$
is the distance between two walls
$H$
normalized by the maximum bubble radius
$R_{max}$
. The mechanism is related to the collapsing flow, which is constrained by the distant wall into a reverse stagnation-point flow that builds up pressure near the bubble's top surface and accelerates it into micro-jets. We further derive an equation expressing the micro-jet velocity
$U_{jet}=87.94\gamma ^{0.5}(1+(1/3)(\eta -\lambda ^{1.2})^{-2})$
, where
${\gamma =d/R_{max}}$
is the stand-off distance to the proximal wall with
$d$
the distance between the initial bubble centre and the wall,
$\lambda =R_{y,m}/R_{max}$
with
$R_{y,m}$
the distance between the top surface and the proximal wall at the bubble's maximum expansion. Viscosity has a minimal impact on the jet velocity for small
$\gamma$
, where the pressure buildup is predominantly influenced by geometry.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
3 articles.
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