Abstract

In the present study, the wake structures behind an oscillating (zigzagging in a plane) air bubble, rising in a close vicinity of a vertical wall are experimentally investigated using a high-speed two-phase particle image velocimetry. While varying the distance between the rising bubble and the wall, the spatial and temporal variations in the spanwise and streamwise vorticity components contained in the wake vortices, in addition to the bubble trajectory, are measured in a tank filled with water. In particular, the Lagrangian streamwise vorticity fields in the bubble wake have been reconstructed and investigated in detail with different conditions. Without the wall, it is confirmed that there exist counter-rotating streamwise vortex tubes in the bubble wake, agreeing with the case of a two-dimensional zigzagging bubble, as reported in the literatures. It is also found that the hairpin vortex chain structures, initially attached to the bubble rear, evolve to detached vortex ring structures as the bubble rises in an oscillating path. While the detailed vortex structures show up quite differently from the reference case depending on the distance to the wall (e.g., actual bubble-wall collision), in general the wake behind the bubble as it moves toward and away from the wall can be summarized as: (i) transition to the detached vortex ring structures is accelerated; (ii) streamwise length of vortex tubes is shortened (evolution is interfered); (iii) counter-rotating vortex tubes approaching the wall tend to slightly bounce off and slide away (being dissipated fast) from each other on the wall; and (iv) boundary-layer like secondary flow structures are induced on the wall due to additional viscous effects. These wall-induced wake modification indicates that more fluid energy is wasted due to the wall interference, rather than being used to force the lateral movement of the bubble, which agrees with the reduced amplitude and wavelength of the oscillating bubble path on the wall. Finally, this explanation has been further confirmed by estimating the vortex-induced lateral forces acting on the bubble for each case.

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