Abstract

Numerical solutions of the full Navier–Stokes equations are used to investigate the steady and unsteady deformation of a bubble in a biaxial straining flow for Reynolds numbers in the range 0≤R≤400, and Weber numbers up to O(10). The steady-state bubble shape and the frequency of small amplitude oscillations of shape are both identical for biaxial and uniaxial straining flows in the potential flow limit. However, for a large, but finite Reynolds number, the bubble shape in the biaxial straining flow is found to be fundamentally different from the shape in uniaxial flows. This is shown to be a consequence of vorticity enhancement via vortex line stretching in the biaxial flow, which does not occur in the uniaxial flow. At the highest Reynolds number considered here, R=400, the steady-state bubble behavior for low W is qualitatively similar to the potential flow case, with a limit point for existence of the low W branch of steady solutions occurring at W∼6. However, in this case a second branch of steady solutions is found for larger W≥7, which exhibits oblate bubble shapes for large W, and has no counterpart in the potential flow limit. In unsteady flows, the behavior of bubble deformation is fundamentally different in the uniaxial and biaxial flows for both high Reynolds numbers and the potential flow limit. This suggests that breakup will occur in far different ways in the two cases.

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