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Interfacial flow of a surfactant-laden interface under asymmetric shear flow

Authors :
(0000-0003-2951-7866) Eftekhari, M.
(0000-0002-4866-483X) Schwarzenberger, K.
(0000-0002-2493-7629) Heitkam, S.
(0000-0002-9671-8628) Eckert, K.
(0000-0003-2951-7866) Eftekhari, M.
(0000-0002-4866-483X) Schwarzenberger, K.
(0000-0002-2493-7629) Heitkam, S.
(0000-0002-9671-8628) Eckert, K.
Source :
Journal of Colloid and Interface Science 599(2021), 837-848
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Hypothesis The shear stress of the axisymmetric flow field triggers a nonuniform distribution of the surfactants at the surface of a rising bubble, known as stagnant cap. The formation of the stagnant cap gives rise to Marangoni stresses that reduce the mobility of the interface, which in return reduces the rising velocity. However, the conditions in technological processes usually deviate from the linear rise of a single bubble in a quiescent unbounded liquid. Asymmetric shear can act on the bubble surface e.g. due to the vorticity in the surrounding flow, bubble-bubble interactions, or influence of the reactor wall. A different surfactant distribution at the interface is expected under asymmetric shear, which can change the hydrodynamic behavior of the interface drastically. Experiments Here we conduct model experiments with a bubble or a drop at the tip of a capillary placed in a defined flow field. Thereby we investigate the influence of asymmetric shear forces on the interface in the presence of surfactants. Microscopic particle tracking velocimetry is employed to measure the velocity of the surfactant-laden interface for different degrees of asymmetry in the surrounding liquid flow. Findings We show a direct experimental observation of the circulating flow at the interface under asymmetric shear, which prevents the formation of the typical stagnant cap. Additionally, we reveal that the interface remains mobile regardless of the surfactant concentration. Our results confirm that increasing the degree of asymmetry increases the shear forces and thus the interfacial velocity.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Journal of Colloid and Interface Science 599(2021), 837-848
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1415625716
Document Type :
Electronic Resource