Abstract

The main characteristic of the bubble dynamics near a rigid wall is the development of a high speed liquid jet, generating highly localized pressure on the wall. In present study, the bubble dynamic behaviors and the pressure impulses are investigated through experimental and numerical methods. In the experiment, the dynamics of a spark-generated bubble near a steel plate are captured by a high-speed camera with up to 650,000 frames per second. Numerical studies are conducted using a boundary integral method with incompressible assumption, and the vortex ring model is introduced to handle the discontinued potential of the toroidal bubble. Meanwhile, the pressure on the rigid wall is calculated by an auxiliary function. Calculated results with two different stand-off parameters show excellent agreement with experimental observations. A double-peaked or multiple-peaked structure occurs in the pressure profile during the collapse and rebounding phase. Generally, the pressure at the wall center reaches the first peak soon after the jet impact, and the second peak is caused by the rapid migration of the bubble toward the wall, and the subsequent peaks may be caused by the splashing effect and the rebounding of the toroidal bubble. At last, both agreements and differences are found in the comparison between the present model and a hybrid incompressible–compressible method in Hsiao et al. (2014). The differences show that the compressibility of the flow is another influence factor of the jet impact. However, the main features of the jet impact could be simulated using the present model.

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