Abstract

This study aims to elucidate the complex interaction between a suspended particle and an attached bubble, which is associated with cavitation in silt-laden flow. Systematic experiments are performed with high-speed photography, in which bubbles are generated by underwater electric discharge means. The bubble-particle interactions are found to be strongly dependent on two dimensionless parameters, i.e., the particle-bubble size ratio λL and the particle-liquid density ratio λρ. When λρ equals 2.61, the bubble split phenomenon is universally observed and the particle shooting effect (the particle acceleration during bubble expansion and after bubble-particle detachment) becomes more obvious as λL decreases. If λL < ∼0.34, the particle velocity keeps positive (away from the bubble), otherwise the particle velocity drops below zero (toward the bubble) during the bubble collapse phase. As λρ increases, the particle achieves a lower velocity but a higher impulse, and the bubble necking phenomenon is more pronounced. Our boundary integral simulations reproduce the experiments extremely well, including the particle dynamics, the bubble wrapping the particle, the bubble necking and detachment, and the mushroom-shaped bubble. After the bubble-particle detachment, the liquid around the detachment location is drawn inward and collides on the axis of symmetry, leading to the formation of a localized high pressure region between the bubble and the particle, which accelerates the particle for the second time even in the bubble collapse phase.

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