TY - JOUR
T1 - Multitude of dimple shapes can produce singular jets during the collapse of immiscible drop-impact craters
AU - Yang, Zi Qiang
AU - Tian, Yuansi
AU - Thoroddsen, Sigurdur T
N1 - KAUST Repository Item: Exported on 2020-10-09
Acknowledged KAUST grant number(s): URF/1/3727-01-01
Acknowledgements: This study was supported by King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) under grant URF/1/3727-01-01. We acknowledge useful discussions with J.Eggers, C. Y. Lei and L. Deike.
PY - 2020/10/7
Y1 - 2020/10/7
N2 - We study singular jets from the collapse of drop-impact craters, when the drop and pool are of different immiscible liquids. The fastest jets emerge from a dimple at the bottom of the rebounding crater, when no bubble is pinched off. The parameter space is considerably more complex than for identical liquids, revealing intricate compound-dimple shapes. In contrast to the universal capillary–inertial drop pinch-off regime, where the neck radius scales as R ∼ t 2/3, for a purely inertial air dimple the collapse has R ∼ t
1/2. The bottom dimple dynamics is not self-similar but possesses memory effects, being sensitive to initial and boundary conditions. Sequence of capillary waves can therefore mould the air dimple into different collapse shapes, such as bamboo-like and telescopic forms. The finest jets are only 12 μm in diameter and the normalized jetting speeds are up to one order of magnitude larger than for jets from bursting bubbles. We study the cross-over between the two power laws approaching the singularity. The singular jets show the earliest cross-over into the inertial regime. The fastest jets can pinch off a toroidal micro-bubble from the cusp at the base of the jet.
AB - We study singular jets from the collapse of drop-impact craters, when the drop and pool are of different immiscible liquids. The fastest jets emerge from a dimple at the bottom of the rebounding crater, when no bubble is pinched off. The parameter space is considerably more complex than for identical liquids, revealing intricate compound-dimple shapes. In contrast to the universal capillary–inertial drop pinch-off regime, where the neck radius scales as R ∼ t 2/3, for a purely inertial air dimple the collapse has R ∼ t
1/2. The bottom dimple dynamics is not self-similar but possesses memory effects, being sensitive to initial and boundary conditions. Sequence of capillary waves can therefore mould the air dimple into different collapse shapes, such as bamboo-like and telescopic forms. The finest jets are only 12 μm in diameter and the normalized jetting speeds are up to one order of magnitude larger than for jets from bursting bubbles. We study the cross-over between the two power laws approaching the singularity. The singular jets show the earliest cross-over into the inertial regime. The fastest jets can pinch off a toroidal micro-bubble from the cusp at the base of the jet.
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10754/665489
UR - https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S0022112020006941/type/journal_article
U2 - 10.1017/jfm.2020.694
DO - 10.1017/jfm.2020.694
M3 - Article
SN - 0022-1120
VL - 904
JO - Journal of Fluid Mechanics
JF - Journal of Fluid Mechanics
ER -