X-ray Group Virtual Journal Club

Entries tagged as ‘coalescence’

Droplet Coalescence

March 18, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Two recent PRLs are addressing the issue of how two droplets merge into one.fezzaa_img1.jpg

Kamel Fezzaa and Yujie Wang from Argonne use ultrafast x-ray phase-contrast imaging to take sub-microsecond exposures of droplet coalescence, which is complete in just under a milisecond.

Phys. Rev. Lett. 100, 104501 (2008)

The studied liquid droplets are ~1mm (bar size in the image on the left) in size, and can be seen with <5 micron resolution using phase contrast (as opposed to adsorption contrast) using high energy 13keV x-rays. Fezzaa and Wang cleverly used the hybrid filling pattern of Advanced Photon Source, where each electron bunch produces a short x-ray pulse 472 nanoseconds long used for imaging, with each pulse separated from the next one by 3.6 microseconds. The result is a sub-microsecond “shutter time” defined by the length of each pulse, with consecutive images taken 3.6 microseconds apart.

Of particular interest in this study is the stability of torroidal air bubble formed due to air trapped by the two rapidly coalescing droplet menisci. Fezzaa and Wang show for the first time that the torroidal bubble remains trapped until some 400 microsecond after the droplets start merging.

The second recent paper on this topic of droplet coalescence is by Sara Case and Sid Nagelcase_img1.jpg at University of Chicago. PRL 100, 084503 (2008)

Case and Nagel abandon the visual approach to studies of ultrafast coalescence process, and instead adopt a technique which measures the changes in conductivity across the connection between the two droplets as a function of time. When the droplets begin to coalesce, the effective resistivity is high, since it is defined primarily by the width of the narrow region where the two droplets touch each other. As they coalesce, this resistivity will drop. This technique proves to be especially useful in the timescale range from sub-microsecond to hundreds of microsecond. Case and Nagel observe a cross-over in power-law behavior for R(t) from 1/t for small t to 1/√t at large t, but do not see time-dependent fluctuations in R(t) which would be the signature of the connected menisci repeatedly disconnecting and reconnecting again.

Categories: liquids · ultrafast · xray
Tagged: , , , , ,

Droplet Reunion

January 26, 2008 · Leave a Comment

In an article Phys. Rev. Lett. 100, 024501 (2008) Nicolas Bremond, Abdou Thiam, and Jerome Bibette are studying coalescence of the emulsion droplets (sizes on the order of tens of microns) in microfluidic channels. What they find is that coalescence of the droplets happens when the dropets begin to separate, and proceeds in a cascading “chain reaction” of sort, with an entire train of particles coalescing together, once the first pair of particles start merging.

Categories: journal club · liquids
Tagged: , , ,