CHARACTERIZATION OF THE DYNAMICS OF VAPOR BUBBLE COLLAPSE

Author(s):  
Raunak Bardia ◽  
Mario F. Trujillo
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
Vol 33 (9) ◽  
pp. 096107
Author(s):  
T. Trummler ◽  
S. J. Schmidt ◽  
N. A. Adams

2019 ◽  
Vol 26 (6) ◽  
pp. 879-887
Author(s):  
R. I. Nigmatulin ◽  
A. A. Aganin ◽  
D. Yu. Toporkov
Keyword(s):  

2015 ◽  
Vol 656 ◽  
pp. 012028 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francesco Magaletti ◽  
Luca Marino ◽  
Carlo Massimo Casciola

1977 ◽  
Vol 99 (3) ◽  
pp. 392-397 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. R. Pitts ◽  
H. C. Hewitt ◽  
B. R. McCullough

An experimental program was conducted to determine the collapse rate of slug-type vapor bubbles rising due to buoyancy through subcooled parent liquid in a vertical isothermal tube. The experimental apparatus included a vertical glass tube with an outer glass container providing a constant temperature water bath for the inner tube. The inner tube contained distilled, deaerated water, and water vapor bubbles were generated at the bottom of this tube with a pulsed electric heater. The parent liquid was uniformly subcooled with respect to the vapor bubble resulting in heat transfer controlled bubble collapse. Collapse rates and rise velocities were recorded by high-speed motion picture photography. Over a limited range of subcooling, the bubble collapse was well behaved, and a simple, quasi-steady boundary layer heat transfer analysis adapted from slug flow over a flat plate correlated the experimental results with a high degree of accuracy. Experimental results were obtained with tubes having inside diameters of 0.0127, 0.0218, and 0.0381 m and for a range of subcooling from 0.5 to 9.0 K.


2013 ◽  
Vol 135 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Fortes-Patella ◽  
G. Challier ◽  
J. L. Reboud ◽  
A. Archer

An original approach based on energy balance between vapor bubble collapse, emitted pressure wave, and neighboring solid wall response was proposed, developed, and tested to estimate the aggressiveness of cavitating flows. In the first part of the work, to improve a prediction method for cavitation erosion (Fortes-Patella and Reboud, 1998, “A New Approach to Evaluate the Cavitation Erosion Power,” ASME J. Fluids Eng., 120(2), pp. 335–344; Fortes-Patella and Reboud, 1998, “Energetical Approach and Impact Efficiency in Cavitation Erosion,” Proceedings of Third International Symposium on Cavitation, Grenoble, France), we were interested in studying the pressure waves emitted during bubble collapse. The radial dynamics of a spherical vapor/gas bubble in a compressible and viscous liquid was studied by means of Keller's and Fujikawa and Akamatsu's physical models (Prosperetti, 1994, “Bubbles Dynamics: Some Things we did not Know 10 Years Ago,” Bubble Dynamics and Interface Phenomena, Blake, Boulton-Stone, Thomas, eds., Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, the Netherlands, pp. 3–15; Fujikawa and Akamatsu, 1980, “Effects of Non-Equilibrium Condensation of Vapor on the Pressure Wave Produced by Collapse of a Bubble in Liquid,” J. Fluid Mech., 97(3), pp. 481–512). The pressure amplitude, the profile, and the energy of the pressure waves emitted during cavity collapses were evaluated by numerical simulations. The model was validated by comparisons with experiments carried out at Laboratoire Laser, Plasma et Procédés Photoniques (LP3-IRPHE) (Marseille, France) with laser-induced bubble (Isselin et al., 1998, “Investigations of Material Damages Induced by an Isolated Vapor Bubble Created by Pulsed Laser,” Proceedings of Third International Symposium on Cavitation, Grenoble, France; Isselin et al., 1998, “On Laser Induced Single Bubble Near a Solid Boundary: Contribution to the Understanding of Erosion Phenomena,” J. Appl. Phys., 84(10), pp. 5766–5771). The efficiency of the first collapse ηwave/bubble (defined as the ratio between pressure wave energy and initial bubble potential energy) was evaluated for different bubble collapses. For the cases considered of collapse in a constant-pressure field, the study pointed out the strong influence of the air contents on the bubble dynamics, on the emitted pressure wave characteristics, and on the collapse efficiency. In the second part of the study, the dynamic response and the surface deformation (i.e., pit profile and pit volume) of various materials exposed to pressure wave impacts was simulated making use of a 2D axisymmetric numerical code simulating the interaction between pressure wave and an elastoplastic solid. Making use of numerical results, a new parameter β (defined as the ratio between the pressure wave energy and the generated pit volume) was introduced and evaluated for three materials (aluminum, copper, and stainless steel). By associating numerical simulations and experimental results concerning pitted samples exposed to cavitating flows (volume damage rate), the pressure wave power density and the flow aggressiveness potential power were introduced. These physical properties of the flow characterize the cavitation intensity and can be related to the flow hydrodynamic conditions. Associated to β and ηwave/bubble parameters, these power densities appeared to be useful tools to predict the cavitation erosion power.


1969 ◽  
Vol 91 (4) ◽  
pp. 537-542 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. M. Cho ◽  
R. A. Seban

Further consideration is given to the problem of the collapse of a vapor bubble, with the bubble initially in equilibrium with an isothermal liquid of infinite extent and with the collapse produced by a sudden increase in the pressure at infinity. In the numerical analysis, made for a steam bubble surrounded by water, the energy equation is solved in finite increments rather than by use of the Plesset-Zwick method, and comparisons are made to the results of the latter method as used by Florschuetz and Chao. The assumption of zero vapor velocity is also replaced by an alternative hypothesis which allows vapor motion, and this alternative approach yields a prediction of an oscillatory collapse rather than the relatively monotonic collapse indicated by the former assumption.


2020 ◽  
Vol 142 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jyoti Bhati ◽  
Swapan Paruya ◽  
Subhramaniam Pushpavanam

Abstract In this work, we compute the dynamics of a spherical vapor-bubble in an infinite pool of subcooled water during bubble collapse using our semi-analytical method. The main contribution of this work is to bring out the dynamics of nonmonotonic bubble collapse describing heat transfer characteristics and nonlinear dynamics. The dynamics shows the variation of radius with time for collapsing vapor bubble at different subcooling ΔTsub of 1.40 K to 35 K. The present approach accurately determines the bubble radius decreasing with time and has been compared with our experimental results, the experiment from literature, the other theories, and correlations. As it is noted that the literature lacks steady-state analysis of oscillating bubble collapse, we also report the steady-state analysis and the bifurcation analysis of bubble collapse at a pressure of 1.0 atm to check the stability of bubble collapse. The effect of ΔTsub and initial bubble radius R0 on dynamics of bubble collapse has been analyzed. The collapse of big bubbles involves with the bubble oscillations because of a large contribution of liquid inertia and the collapse of very small bubbles essentially occurs in heat transfer regime.


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