Abstract
A three-dimensional analysis is performed to investigate
the effects of an electric field
on the steady deformation and small-amplitude oscillation of a bubble in
dielectric
liquid. To deal with a general class of electric fields, an electric field
near the bubble is
approximately represented by the sum of a uniform field and a linear field.
Analytical
results have been obtained for steady deformation and modification of oscillation
frequency by using the domain perturbation method with the angular momentum
operator approach.It has been found that, to the first order, the steady shape of a bubble
in an
arbitrary electric field can be represented by a linear combination of
a finite number
of spherical harmonics Yml,
where 0[les ]l[les ]4 and [mid ]m[mid ][les ]l. For the oscillation
about
the deformed steady shape, the overall frequency modification from the
value of
free oscillation about a spherical shape is obtained by considering two
contributions
separately: (i) that due to the deformed steady shape (indirect effect),
and (ii) that
due to the direct effect of an electric field. Both the direct and indirect
effects of
an electric field split the (2l+1)-fold degenerate frequency of
Yml modes, in the case
of free oscillation about a spherical shape, into different frequencies
that depend on
m. However, when the average is taken over the
(2l+1) values of m, the frequency
splitting due to the indirect effect via the deformed steady shape preserves
the average
value, while the splitting due to the direct effect of an electric field
does not.The oscillation characteristics of a bubble in a uniform electric field
under the
negligible compressibility assumption are compared with those of a conducting
drop
in a uniform electric field. For axisymmetric oscillation modes, deforming
the steady
shape into a prolate spheroid has the same effect of decreasing the oscillation
frequency
in both the drop and the bubble. However, the electric field has different
effects on
the oscillation about a spherical shape. The oscillation frequency increases
with the
increase of electric field in the case of a bubble, while it decreases
in the case of a drop.
This fundamental difference comes from the fact that the electric field
outside the
bubble exerts a suppressive surface force while the electric field outside
the conducting
drop exerts a pulling force on the surface.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
24 articles.
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