Author:
TOMITA Y.,ROBINSON P. B.,TONG R. P.,BLAKE J. R.
Abstract
Laser-induced cavitation bubbles near a curved rigid boundary are observed experimentally using high-speed photography. An image theory is applied to obtain
information on global bubble motion while a boundary integral method is employed
to gain a more detailed understanding of the behaviour of a liquid jet that threads
a collapsing bubble, creating a toroidal bubble. Comparisons between the theory
and experiment show that when a comparable sized bubble is located near a rigid
boundary the bubble motion is significantly influenced by the surface curvature of
the boundary, which is characterized by a parameter ζ, giving convex walls for ζ < 1,
concave walls for ζ > 1 and a flat wall when ζ = 1. If a boundary is slightly concave,
the most pronounced migration occurs at the first bubble collapse. The velocity of
a liquid jet impacting on the far side of the bubble surface tends to increase with
decreasing parameter ζ. In the case of a convex boundary, the jet velocity is larger
than that generated in the flat boundary case. Although the situation considered
here is restricted to axisymmetric motion without mean flow, this result suggests that
higher pressures can occur when cavitation bubbles collapse near a non-flat boundary.
Bubble separation, including the pinch-off phenomenon, is observed in the final stage
of the collapse of a bubble, with the oblate shape at its maximum volume attached to
the surface of a convex boundary, followed by bubble splitting which is responsible
for further bubble proliferation.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
180 articles.
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