Abstract
An experimental investigation of the binary droplet collision
dynamics was conducted, with emphasis on the transition between
different collision outcomes. A series of time-resolved photographic
images which map all the collision regimes in terms of the collision
Weber number and the impact parameter were used to identify the
controlling factors for different outcomes. The effects of liquid and
gas properties were studied by conducting experiments with both water
and hydrocarbon droplets in environments of different gases (air,
nitrogen, helium and ethylene) and pressures, the latter ranging from
0.6 to 12 atm. It is shown that, by varying the density of the gas
through its pressure and molecular weight, water and hydrocarbon
droplets both exhibit five distinct regimes of collision outcomes,
namely (I) coalescence after minor deformation, (II) bouncing, (III)
coalescence after substantial deformation, (IV) coalescence followed
by separation for near head-on collisions, and (V) coalescence
followed by separation for off-centre collisions. The present result
therefore extends and unifies previous experimental observations,
obtained at one atmosphere air, that regimes II and II do not exist
for water droplets. Furthermore, it was found that coalescence of the
hydrocarbon droplets is promoted in the presence of gaseous
hydrocarbons in the environment, suggesting that coalescence is
facilitated when the environment contains vapour of the liquid mass.
Collision at high-impact inertia was also studied, and the mechanisms
for separation of the coalescence are discussed based on
time-resolved collision images. A coalescence/separation
criterion defining the transition between regimes III and IV for the
head-on collisions was derived and found to agree well with the
experimental data.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
649 articles.
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