Abstract

The operating regimes of an orifice-type helium-filled soap bubbles (HFSB) generator are investigated for several combinations of air, helium and soap flow rates to establish the properties of the production process and the resulting tracers. The geometrical properties of the bubbles, the production regimes and the production rates are studied with high-speed shadowgraphy. The results show that the bubble volume is directly proportional to the ratio of helium and air volume flow rates, and that the bubble production rate varies approximately linearly with the air flow rate. The bubble slip velocity is measured along the stagnation streamline ahead of a cylinder via particle image velocimetry (PIV), yielding the particle time response from which the neutral buoyancy condition for HFSB is inferred. The HFSB tracing capability approaches that of an ideal tracer (i.e., minimum slip and shortest response time) when the volume flow rate of helium is approximately one thousandfold the soap flow rate. This study provides guidelines for operating HFSB generation systems, intended for PIV experiments.Graphical abstract

Highlights

  • The application of helium-filled soap bubbles (HFSB) for visualization of air flows dates back to the early work of Pounder (1956)

  • The main bubble generator employed in the experiments is an Netherlands Aerospace Centre (NLR) design (Fig. 1, left) of 1 mm orifice diameter, which is a CNC-manufactured generator based on the 3D printed HFSB-GEN-V11 generator developed at TU Delft

  • The production rate measured with the NLR generator shows a similar trend to that obtained with the DLR generator of smaller orifice size (0.75 mm)

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Summary

Introduction

The application of helium-filled soap bubbles (HFSB) for visualization of air flows dates back to the early work of Pounder (1956).

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Size and production rate
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Time response and neutral buoyancy
Bubble shape
Instrumentation
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Visualization technique
HFSB time response and density
Shadow visualization of production regimes
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Production regime envelopes
Variance of time response and diameter
Bubble production rate and size
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Conclusions
Findings
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Full Text
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