Abstract

This study investigates the influence of viscoelasticity on the collapse of aspherical vapor bubbles near a solid boundary through numerical simulations. A fully compressible three-dimensional finite volume method is employed, incorporating a single-fluid homogeneous mixture cavitation model and the simplified linear Phan-Thien Tanner viscoelastic constitutive model. The collapse dynamics, liquid jetting, shock wave formation, and associated pressure impact are analyzed, and the viscous and viscoelastic stress fields are presented. A comparison of viscoelastic to Newtonian dynamics reveals significant differences in collapse behavior and shock wave formation due to viscoelasticity. Viscoelasticity can induce jet piercing, which is not observed in the Newtonian collapse, and increases vapor re-evaporation after the first collapse. The effect of changing the initial standoff distance is examined for both viscoelastic and Newtonian fluids, where a second jet formation is present only for the viscoelastic collapse, and the second collapse's intensity is increased due to increased vapor production during rebound. Additionally, the variation of elasticity in the viscoelastic case demonstrates a correlation between the amount of vapor produced during rebound and the relaxation time for the investigated cases.

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