Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gvvz8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T12:28:12.226Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bursting bubble in a viscoplastic medium

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2021

Vatsal Sanjay*
Affiliation:
Physics of Fluids Group, Max Planck Center for Complex Fluid Dynamics, MESA+ Institute and J.M. Burgers Center for Fluid Dynamics, University of Twente, P.O. Box 217, 7500 AEEnschede, the Netherlands
Detlef Lohse*
Affiliation:
Physics of Fluids Group, Max Planck Center for Complex Fluid Dynamics, MESA+ Institute and J.M. Burgers Center for Fluid Dynamics, University of Twente, P.O. Box 217, 7500 AEEnschede, the Netherlands Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organisation, 37077Göttingen, Germany
Maziyar Jalaal*
Affiliation:
Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics, University of Cambridge, CambridgeCB3 0WA, United Kingdom Van der Waals–Zeeman Institute, Institute of Physics, University of Amsterdam, 1098XHAmsterdam, The Netherlands
*
Email addresses for correspondence: [email protected], [email protected], [email protected]
Email addresses for correspondence: [email protected], [email protected], [email protected]
Email addresses for correspondence: [email protected], [email protected], [email protected]

Abstract

When a rising bubble in a Newtonian liquid reaches the liquid–air interface, it can burst, leading to the formation of capillary waves and a jet on the surface. Here, we numerically study this phenomenon in a yield-stress fluid. We show how viscoplasticity controls the fate of these capillary waves and their interaction at the bottom of the cavity. Unlike Newtonian liquids, the free surface converges to a non-flat final equilibrium shape once the driving stresses inside the pool fall below the yield stress. Details of the dynamics, including flow energy budgets, are discussed. The work culminates in a regime map with four main regimes, all with different characteristic behaviours.

Type
JFM Papers
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press

1. Introduction

Bubble bursting processes abound in nature and technology and have been studied for many years in fluid mechanics (Liger-Belair, Polidori & Jeandet Reference Liger-Belair, Polidori and Jeandet2008). For example, they play a vital role in transporting aromatics from champagne (Liger-Belair Reference Liger-Belair2012; Vignes-Adler Reference Vignes-Adler2013; Ghabache et al. Reference Ghabache, Antkowiak, Josserand and Séon2014, Reference Ghabache, Liger-Belair, Antkowiak and Séon2016), and pathogens from contaminated water (Poulain & Bourouiba Reference Poulain and Bourouiba2018; Bourouiba Reference Bourouiba2021). The process is also responsible for forming sea spray through ejecting myriads of droplets (MacIntyre Reference MacIntyre1972; Singh & Das Reference Singh and Das2019). Bursting bubbles also play an important role in geophysical phenomena such as volcanic eruptions (Gonnermann & Manga Reference Gonnermann and Manga2007).

In Newtonian liquids, the bubble bursting mechanism is controlled by buoyancy, surface tension and viscosity. First, the air bubble (figure 1a) being lighter than the surrounding medium, rises and approaches the liquid–air interface (figure 1b). The thin film between the bubble and the free surface then gradually drains (Toba Reference Toba1959; Princen Reference Princen1963) and eventually ruptures, resulting in an open cavity (figure 1c, Mason Reference Mason1954). The collapse of this cavity leads to a series of rich dynamical processes that involve capillary waves (Zeff et al. Reference Zeff, Kleber, Fineberg and Lathrop2000; Duchemin et al. Reference Duchemin, Popinet, Josserand and Zaleski2002) and may lead to the formation of a Worthington jet (Gordillo & Rodríguez-Rodríguez Reference Gordillo and Rodríguez-Rodríguez2019). In some cases, the jet might break via a Rayleigh–Plateau instability, forming droplets (Ghabache et al. Reference Ghabache, Antkowiak, Josserand and Séon2014; Ghabache & Séon Reference Ghabache and Séon2016). The phenomenon is so robust that it even occurs in soft granular matter, when a rising bubble also bursts at the surface, leading to a granular jet (Lohse et al. Reference Lohse, Bergmann, Mikkelsen, Zeilstra, van der Meer, Versluis, van der Weele, van der Hoef and Kuipers2004).

Figure 1. Schematics for the process of a bursting bubble: (a) a gas bubble in bulk. (b) The bubble approaches the free surface forming a liquid film (thickness $\delta$) between itself and the free surface. (c) A bubble cavity forms when the thin liquid film disappears.

Earlier work on bursting bubbles used boundary integral methods in an inviscid limit (Boulton-Stone & Blake Reference Boulton-Stone and Blake1993; Longuet-Higgins & Oguz Reference Longuet-Higgins and Oguz1995). However, the progress made using direct numerical simulation (DNS) tools for multiphase flows (Popinet Reference Popinet2003, Reference Popinet2009; Tryggvason, Scardovelli & Zaleski Reference Tryggvason, Scardovelli and Zaleski2011) has resulted in models that take into account the effects of viscosity. In fact, some recent studies have revealed how the viscosity of a liquid affects the dynamics of bursting bubbles (Deike et al. Reference Deike, Ghabache, Liger-Belair, Das, Zaleski, Popinet and Séon2018; Gordillo & Rodríguez-Rodríguez Reference Gordillo and Rodríguez-Rodríguez2019).

For Newtonian liquids, Deike et al. (Reference Deike, Ghabache, Liger-Belair, Das, Zaleski, Popinet and Séon2018) have provided quantitative cross-validation of numerical and experimental studies. They have also given a complete quantitative description of the influence of viscosity, gravity and capillarity on the process, extending the earlier work of Duchemin et al. (Reference Duchemin, Popinet, Josserand and Zaleski2002). More recently, experiments and simulations, complemented by theoretical frameworks (Gañán-Calvo Reference Gañán-Calvo2017; Gordillo & Rodríguez-Rodríguez Reference Gordillo and Rodríguez-Rodríguez2019), have resulted in a profound understanding of the physics of bubble bursting in Newtonian fluids. Appendix B provides more details on the previous studies in the Newtonian limit and compares our results with those available in the literature.

Notably, despite many applications, such as in the food industry and geophysics, the influence of rheological properties on the collapse of bubble cavities is yet to be understood. Here, we study the dynamics of bursting bubbles in a viscoplastic medium using DNS. Viscoplastic or yield-stress fluids manifest a mix of solid and fluid behaviour. The materials behave more like an elastic solid below critical stress (yield stress); however, they flow like a viscous liquid above this critical stress. Readers can find detailed reviews on yield-stress fluids in Bird, Dai & Yarusso (Reference Bird, Dai and Yarusso1983), Coussot (Reference Coussot2014), Balmforth, Frigaard & Ovarlez (Reference Balmforth, Frigaard and Ovarlez2014) and Bonn et al. (Reference Bonn, Denn, Berthier, Divoux and Manneville2017).

Previous experiments and simulations have been reported for trapped bubbles in a viscoplastic medium (Dubash & Frigaard Reference Dubash and Frigaard2004; De Corato et al. Reference De Corato, Saint-Michel, Makrigiorgos, Dimakopoulos, Tsamopoulos and Garbin2019; Sun et al. Reference Sun, Pan, Zhang, Zhao, Zhao and Wang2020), rising bubbles in yield-stress fluids (Singh & Denn Reference Singh and Denn2008; Tsamopoulos et al. Reference Tsamopoulos, Dimakopoulos, Chatzidai, Karapetsas and Pavlidis2008; Sikorski, Tabuteau & de Bruyn Reference Sikorski, Tabuteau and de Bruyn2009; Mougin, Magnin & Piau Reference Mougin, Magnin and Piau2012; Dimakopoulos, Pavlidis & Tsamopoulos Reference Dimakopoulos, Pavlidis and Tsamopoulos2013; Tripathi et al. Reference Tripathi, Sahu, Karapetsas and Matar2015; Lopez, Naccache & de Souza Mendes Reference Lopez, Naccache and de Souza Mendes2018) and bubbles moving inside tubes filled with viscoplastic fluids (Jalaal & Balmforth Reference Jalaal and Balmforth2016; Laborie et al. Reference Laborie, Rouyer, Angelescu and Lorenceau2017; Zamankhan, Takayama & Grotberg Reference Zamankhan, Takayama and Grotberg2018). We will show that the introduction of non-Newtonian properties can significantly influence the bursting behaviour of bubbles on a free surface. At moderate values of yield stress, the collapse of the cavity can still lead to the formation of a Worthington jet, but the droplet formation might be suppressed. At high yield-stress values, the unyielded region of the viscoplastic fluid can seize the collapse of this cavity, which leads to distinct final crater shapes.

The paper is organised as follows: § 2 describes the problem and the governing parameters. Section 3 provides a phenomenological analysis and § 4 presents the different modes of energy transfer during the viscoplastic bursting process. Section 5 presents the final equilibrium shapes. The work culminates in § 6 where we summarise the different regimes observed in the process of bursting in a phase diagram. The paper ends with conclusions in § 7.

2. Numerical framework and problem description

2.1. Governing equations

We consider the burst of a small axisymmetric bubble at a surface of an incompressible Bingham fluid. To non-dimensionalise the governing equations, we remove the length and velocity scales using the initial bubble radius $R_0$ and inertia–capillary velocity $V_\gamma$, respectively. Pressure and stresses are scaled with the characteristic capillary pressure $\tau _\gamma$ (see Appendix A). The dimensionless equations for mass and momentum conservation, for the liquid phase, then read

(2.1)\begin{gather} \boldsymbol{\nabla} \boldsymbol{\cdot} \boldsymbol{u}=0, \end{gather}
(2.2)\begin{gather}\frac{\partial\boldsymbol{u}}{\partial t} + \boldsymbol{\nabla}\boldsymbol{\cdot}(\boldsymbol{uu}) ={-} \boldsymbol{\nabla} p + \boldsymbol{\nabla}\boldsymbol{\cdot}\boldsymbol{\tau} - \mathcal{B}o\,\hat{\boldsymbol{e}}_{\boldsymbol{\mathcal{Z}}}, \end{gather}

where $\boldsymbol {u}$ is the velocity vector, $t$ is time, $p$ is the pressure and $\boldsymbol {\tau }$ represents the deviatoric stress tensor. We use a regularised Bingham model with

(2.3)\begin{equation} \boldsymbol{\tau} = 2\min\left(\frac{\mathcal{J}}{2\|\boldsymbol{\mathcal{D}}\|} + Oh,Oh_{max}\right)\boldsymbol{\mathcal{D}},\end{equation}

where $\|\boldsymbol {\mathcal {D}}\|$ is the second invariant of the deformation rate tensor, $\boldsymbol {\mathcal {D}}$ and $Oh_{max}$ is the viscous regularisation parameter. The three dimensionless numbers controlling the equations above are the plastocapillary number $(\mathcal {J})$, which accounts for the competition between the capillary and yield stresses, the Ohnesorge number $(Oh)$ that compares the inertial–capillary to inertial–viscous timescales and the Bond number $(\mathcal {B}o)$, which compares gravity and surface tension forces:

(2.4ac)\begin{equation} \mathcal{J} = \frac{\tau_yR_0}{\gamma},\quad Oh = \frac{\mu_l}{\sqrt{\rho_l\gamma R_0}},\quad \mathcal{B}o = \frac{\rho_l gR_o^2}{\gamma}. \end{equation}

Here, $\gamma$ is the liquid–gas surface tension coefficient and $\tau _y$ and $\rho _l$ are the liquid's yield stress and density, respectively; $\mu _l$ is the constant viscosity in the Bingham model. Note that in our simulations, we also solve fluid motion in the gas phase, using a similar set of equations (see Appendix A). Hence, the further relevant non-dimensional groups, in addition to those in (2.4ac), are the ratios of density $(\rho _r = \rho _g/\rho _l)$ and viscosity $(\mu _r = \mu _g/\mu _l)$. In the present study these ratios are kept fixed at $10^{-3}$ and $2 \times 10^{-2}$, respectively.

2.2. Method

For our calculations, we use the free software program Basilisk C (Popinet & collaborators Reference Popinet2013–2021a; Popinet Reference Popinet2015). The code uses a volume of fluid (VoF) technique (Tryggvason et al. Reference Tryggvason, Scardovelli and Zaleski2011) to track the interface, introducing a concentration field $c$, that satisfies the scalar advection equation. Hence, (2.1)–(2.2) and their counterparts for the gas phase are solved using a one-fluid approximation, where the surface tension acts as a body force, $\boldsymbol {f}_\gamma$, only at the gas–liquid interface (Brackbill, Kothe & Zemach Reference Brackbill, Kothe and Zemach1992; Popinet Reference Popinet2009). In dimensionless form,

(2.5)\begin{equation} \boldsymbol{f}_\gamma = \kappa\delta_s\hat{\boldsymbol{n}} \approx \kappa\boldsymbol{\nabla}c, \end{equation}

where $\delta _s$ is the interface Dirac function, $\hat {\boldsymbol {n}}$ is a unit vector normal to the interface (Tryggvason et al. Reference Tryggvason, Scardovelli and Zaleski2011) and $\kappa$ is the curvature of the interface, $z = S(r)$ (as discussed by Deserno Reference Deserno2004, pp. 14–16):

(2.6)\begin{equation} \kappa = \frac{\dfrac{\textrm{d}^2S}{\textrm{d}r^2}}{\left(1 + \left(\dfrac{\textrm{d}S}{\textrm{d}r}\right)^2\right)^{3/2}} + \frac{\dfrac{\textrm{d}S}{\textrm{d}r}}{r\left(1 + \left(\dfrac{\textrm{d}S}{\textrm{d}r}\right)^2\right)^{1/2}}. \end{equation}

In Basilisk C, the curvature in (2.6) is calculated using the height-function method. As the surface-tension scheme is explicit in time, the maximum time step is maintained at most at the oscillation period of the smallest wave-length capillary wave (Popinet Reference Popinet2009; Popinet & collaborators Reference Popinet2013–2021b). Note that the curvature defined above is, in fact, the dimensionless capillary pressure. Hence, in the text, the wave with the largest curvature is called the ‘strongest wave’.

Basilisk C also provides adaptive mesh refinement (AMR). We use this feature to minimise errors in the VoF tracer (tolerance threshold: $10^{-3}$) and interface curvature (tolerance threshold: $10^{-4}$). Additionally, we refine based on velocity (tolerance threshold: $10^{-2}$) and vorticity (tolerance threshold: $10^{-3}$) fields to accurately resolve the regions of low strain rates. For AMR, we use a grid resolution such that the minimum cell size is $\varDelta = R_0/512$, which dictates that to get similar results, $512$ cells are required across the bubble radius while using uniform grids. We have also carried out extensive grid independence studies to ensure that changing the grid size does not influence the results. Moreover, we employ free-slip and no-penetration boundary conditions for both liquid and gas at the domain boundaries. For pressure, a zero-gradient condition is employed at the boundaries. For cases where a Worthington jet breaks into droplets, an outflow boundary condition is employed at the top boundary to ensure that the drop does not bounce off the boundary. These boundaries are far away from the bubble (size of the domain is $8R_0$) such that they do not influence the process.

Note that our numerical method uses a regularised form of the Bingham constitutive equations (see (2.3) and Appendix A). Hence, we cannot resolve the exact position of the yield surface as $\|\boldsymbol {\mathcal {D}}\|$ is never precisely zero. However, we can safely assume that low values of $\|\boldsymbol {\mathcal {D}}\|$ will be associated with the plastic regions. In our simulations, $Oh_{max}=10^8$. We have ensured that our results are independent of this regularisation parameter (Appendix E.1). The regularisation of the constitutive model also forces us to choose a criterion for the stoppage time, $t_s$. In our simulations, we consider a significantly small cut-off kinetic energy to stop the simulations (see Appendix E.2 for details).

2.3. Initial condition

This initial shape of a bubble at a fluid–fluid interface (figure 1b) can be calculated by solving the Young–Laplace equations to find the quasi-static equilibrium state for an arbitrary Bond number, $\mathcal {B}o$ (see Lhuissier & Villermaux Reference Lhuissier and Villermaux2012; Walls, Henaux & Bird Reference Walls, Henaux and Bird2015; Deike et al. Reference Deike, Ghabache, Liger-Belair, Das, Zaleski, Popinet and Séon2018; Magnaudet & Mercier Reference Magnaudet and Mercier2020). As a starting point, for this study, we are only concerned with the limit of $Bo \rightarrow 0$, i.e. when capillary effects dominate the gravitational ones. We choose $\mathcal {B}o = 10^{-3}$ for all the simulations in this work. For this value, the initial bubble is nearly spherical in a surrounding Newtonian liquid. Note that the bubble sphericity is a crucial assumption (simplification) in our work. The actual initial shape of the bubble depends on its size ($\mathcal {B}o$), material properties ($\mathcal {J}$, $Oh$), the method of generation and its dynamics before approaching the interface (Dubash & Frigaard Reference Dubash and Frigaard2004; Dimakopoulos et al. Reference Dimakopoulos, Pavlidis and Tsamopoulos2013). Furthermore, for a bubble to rise in a viscoplastic medium, the buoyancy forces should be strong enough to yield the flow (Dubash & Frigaard Reference Dubash and Frigaard2004; Sikorski et al. Reference Sikorski, Tabuteau and de Bruyn2009; Balmforth et al. Reference Balmforth, Frigaard and Ovarlez2014), i.e. $\mathcal {B}o \gg \mathcal {J}$. Hence, non-spherical and non-trivial shapes might be expected (Lopez et al. Reference Lopez, Naccache and de Souza Mendes2018). For such a limit, one should first solve the full dynamics of rising bubbles to achieve the correct initial condition for the bursting problem. Note that low $\mathcal {B}o$ bubbles could still form near a free surface in other situations. One example is the process of laser-induced forward transfer, in which a laser pulse generates a bubble near the free surface of a viscoplastic liquid (Jalaal et al. Reference Jalaal, Schaarsberg, Visser and Lohse2019).

For our given initial shape, the value of $\mathcal {J}$ varies between 0 and 64. This range is selected such that we will study a full range of yield-stress effects, from the Newtonian limit ($\mathcal {J}=0$) to a medium that barely deforms owing to a large yield stress ($\mathcal {J}=64$).

Following the common assumption in these types of problems (Deike et al. Reference Deike, Ghabache, Liger-Belair, Das, Zaleski, Popinet and Séon2018; Gordillo & Rodríguez-Rodríguez Reference Gordillo and Rodríguez-Rodríguez2019), we assume that the thin liquid cap of thickness $\delta$ (figure 1b) disappears at $t = 0$, resulting in the configuration shown in figure 1(c), i.e. the initial condition for our simulations. In figure 1(c), $(\mathcal {R}, \mathcal {Z})$ denotes the radial and axial coordinate system. Furthermore, $\mathcal {H}_i \approx 2$ is the initial bubble depth and $\theta _i$ is the initial location of the cavity-free surface intersection. Note that the curvature diverges at this intersection in such a configuration. We smooth the sharp edge using a small circular arc to circumvent this singularity, introducing a rim with a finite curvature $\kappa _0$ that connects the bubble to the free surface. We ensured that the curvature of the rim is high enough such that the subsequent dynamics are independent of its finite value (for details, see Appendix E.3).

3. Effects of yield stress on the bursting bubble

3.1. Phenomenology

This section describes the dynamics of bursting bubbles and the qualitative effects of the plastocapillary number $(\mathcal {J})$. Figure 2 illustrates four representative cases for this purpose (supplementary movies are available at https://doi.org/10.1017/jfm.2021.489). For a Newtonian liquid (figure 2a, $\mathcal {J} = 0$), the retraction of the rim leads to the formation of capillary waves.

Figure 2. Bursting bubble dynamics for different plastocapillary numbers. (a) $\mathcal {J} = 0.0$: a typical case with a Newtonian liquid medium, (b) $\mathcal {J} =0.1$: a weakly viscoplastic liquid medium in which the process still shows all the major characteristics of the Newtonian liquid, (c) $\mathcal {J} = 0.5$: a case of moderate yield stress whereby the jetting is suppressed, nonetheless the entire cavity still yields and (d) $\mathcal {J} = 1.0$: a highly viscoplastic liquid medium whereby a part of the cavity never yields. The left part of each panel shows the magnitude of the velocity field, and the right part shows the magnitude of the deformation tensor on a $\log _{10}$ scale. The transition to the black region (low strain rates) marks the yield-surface location in the present study. The time instances in this figure are chosen to show significant events throughout the process of bursting bubbles for different $\mathcal {J}$ numbers. For all the cases in this figure, $Oh = 10^{-2}$. Movies 1–3 are available in the supplementary material.

Part of these waves travels away from the cavity, forming regions of small strain rates (black dots in figure 2a: $t = 0.45$), which are advected with the train of capillary waves. Meanwhile the other part of the waves travel down the cavity (figure 2a: $t = 0.1$) and focuses on the bottom of the cavity (figure 2a: $t = 0.45$).

Consequently, a Worthington jet is formed as depicted in figure 2(a): $t = 0.65$. Furthermore, owing to the conservation of momentum, a high-velocity jet is also formed in an opposite sense to the Worthington jet, inside the liquid pool (figure 2a: $t = 0.65$). The Worthington jet can then break into multiple droplets owing to the Rayleigh–Plateau instability (Walls et al. Reference Walls, Henaux and Bird2015). In the Newtonian limit, the flow continues until the free surface is fully flat, that is, when the surface energy is minimised (figure 2a: $t = 4.00$).

The introduction of the yield stress, in general, slows down the flow owing to a larger apparent viscosity. Remarkably, even at large yield stresses, the early time dynamics near the retracting rim remain unchanged owing to the highly curved interface, as clearly shown in the first panels ($t = 0.1$) of figure 2(ad). In contrast, the anatomy of the flow inside the pool is considerably affected owing to the yield stress. At low yield stresses ($\mathcal {J} = 0.1$ in figure 2b: $t = 0.1$), everywhere near the bubble cavity yields at early times. However, as the values of plastocapillary number increases, the size of the yielded region decreases ($\mathcal {J} = 0.5$ and $\mathcal {J} = 1.0$ in figures 2c and 2d, respectively).

Furthermore, at low values of $\mathcal {J}$, the flow focusing at the bottom of the cavity persists (figure 2b: $t = 0.50$), though, owing to the increased dissipation, it is less vigorous. As a result, the jet formed post-collapse is thicker, slower and less prominent (figure 2b: $t = 1.00$) as compared with the Newtonian case (figure 2a: $t = 0.65$). Notably, for small values of $\mathcal {J}$, a Worthington jet still forms and breaks up into droplets owing to the Rayleigh–Plateau instability.

Note that unlike the Newtonian case, where the final shape is always a flat free surface, a viscoplastic medium (i.e. finite $\mathcal {J}$) comes to a halt when stress inside the liquid drops below the yield stress. Hence, the final state can feature non-zero surface energy (figure 2b: $t \ge 4.00$).

At higher values of $\mathcal {J}$, the capillary waves are so damped that the flow focusing at the bottom of the cavity vanishes. At moderate $\mathcal {J}$ numbers (figure 2c where $\mathcal {J} = 0.5$), the capillary waves are still strong enough to travel over the entire cavity (figure 2c: $t = 0.25 - 0.80$). As a result, the entire cavity yields nonetheless, and the final shape still features a deep crater (figure 2c: $t = 1.60$). On further increasing $\mathcal {J}$ such that the yield stress equals the capillary stress ($\tau _y \sim \gamma /R_0$, i.e. $\mathcal {J} \sim O(1)$), the capillary waves do not yield the entire cavity (figure 2d: $t = 0.25 - 0.75$). Hence, the final shape is a deep crater that stores a large surface energy, contrary to the final shapes at small $\mathcal {J}$ values.

In this section, we mainly focus on the effect of yield stress (via $\mathcal {J}$) on the process of bursting bubbles. Appendix C contains the discussion on the effect of $Oh$. Furthermore, in the subsequent sections, we will discuss the features explained previously in more quantitative detail. Sections 3.2 and 3.3 then delineate the travelling capillary waves and the subsequent jet formation (or lack of it), respectively.

3.2. Capillary waves in the presence of yield stress

Capillary waves are critical in the bubble bursting process (Gordillo & Rodríguez-Rodríguez Reference Gordillo and Rodríguez-Rodríguez2019). Initially, the breakage of the film and the retraction of the rim create a train of capillary waves of varying strengths (Gekle et al. Reference Gekle, Gordillo, van der Meer and Lohse2009). However, sharper waves experience very high viscous damping. As a result, the wave focusing and jet formation are controlled by the strongest wave, which is not halted by viscous damping. We follow Gordillo & Rodríguez-Rodríguez (Reference Gordillo and Rodríguez-Rodríguez2019) and track the strongest wave by chasing the maximum curvature of the free-surface wave ($\|\kappa _c\|$). The location of this wave, on the cavity, is denoted by the angular position, $\theta _c$ (see inset in figure 3a).

Figure 3. Effects of viscoplasticity on the travelling capillary waves. (a) Variation of the location $(\theta _c)$ of strongest capillary with time. The grey dotted line denotes the Newtonian limit, $\theta _c -\theta _i \sim -V_\gamma t$ as described by Gordillo & Rodríguez-Rodríguez (Reference Gordillo and Rodríguez-Rodríguez2019). (b) Variation of the strength $(\|\kappa _c\|)$ of the strongest capillary wave with time. Snapshots of the deformation tensor modulus $\|\boldsymbol {\mathcal {D}}\|$ for (c) $\mathcal {J} = 0.2$ and (d) $\mathcal {J} = 1.0$. For all the cases in this figure, $Oh = 10^{-2}$. Movies 4–6 are available in the supplementary material.

For a Newtonian liquid $(\mathcal {J} = 0)$, at low Ohnesorge numbers (e.g. figure 3), the strongest capillary wave propagates at a constant velocity $V_\gamma$, dashed line in figure 3(a). The viscous stress attenuates these waves but does not influence $\theta _c$. Previous studies (Krishnan, Hopfinger & Puthenveettil Reference Krishnan, Hopfinger and Puthenveettil2017; Gordillo & Rodríguez-Rodríguez Reference Gordillo and Rodríguez-Rodríguez2019) have found similar results for Newtonian liquids (see Appendix B for more details). The strength of this wave decreases as it propagates down the cavity owing to continuous viscous dissipation. Around $\theta _c \approx {\rm \pi}/2$, the geometry changes leading to flow focusing resulting in an increase in the strength $(\kappa _c)$ of the wave (see figure 3c: $t = 0.2$ to $t = 0.35$). This minimum value of $\kappa _c$ depends nonlinearly on $Oh$ (see Gordillo & Rodríguez-Rodríguez Reference Gordillo and Rodríguez-Rodríguez2019 & Appendix B for details).

As shown in figures 3(a) and 3(b) (and also discussed in § 3.1), the initial changes in $\|\theta _c\|$ and $\|\kappa _c\|$ remain similar to the Newtonian limit, because the highly curved region near the initial rim retraction fully yields the fluid around it. As the flow develops, the plasticity effects become more pronounced as compared to the capillary effects, and the capillary waves no longer follow the path taken by their Newtonian counterpart. The larger the value of $\mathcal {J}$, the sooner the dynamics of the capillary waves deviate from the Newtonian limit, and they become weaker. Eventually, the waves stop at a finite stoppage time, furnishing a finite final $\theta _c$ and $\|k_c\|$ (represented by $\theta _f$ and $\|\kappa _f\|$, respectively). In § 5, we will discuss the variation of these parameters for the final crater shapes.

3.3. Jet formation in the presence of yield stress

Another interesting feature of the bubble bursting process is the Worthington jet formation as the bubble cavity collapses. To characterise this jet, we track the location $(\mathcal {H})$ of the interface at the centre $\mathcal {R} = 0$. figure 4(a) shows the temporal variation of $\mathcal {H}$ for different values of $\mathcal {J}$ at fixed $Oh = 10^{-2}$. As the waves propagate, the cavity begins to collapse, hence the value of $\mathcal {H}$ decreases. A jet forms when the bottom of the cavity crosses the free surface, and $\mathcal {H}$ becomes negative (see figure 4b). For small values of $\mathcal {J}$, the Rayleigh–Plateau instability and a subsequent pinch-off occur, resulting in the kinks shown in figure 4(a). The jets eventually retract, and $\mathcal {H}$ approaches $0$, i.e. a flat final interface. As the value of $\mathcal {J}$ increases, the final value of $\mathcal {H}$ increases, approaching the upper bound of $\mathcal {H} = \mathcal {H}_i = 2$, which is set by the initial condition (twice the bubble radius, i.e. the bottom of the cavity never yields). In fact, for $\mathcal {J} \ge 0.65$, this value remains unchanged, meaning the plug region attached to the bottom of the cavity never yields. Note that, in an intermediate range of $\mathcal {J} \sim 0.35$, the interplay of the capillary waves and the yield stress results in a dimple (underdeveloped jet) that never crosses the free surface (see figure 4c).

Figure 4. Effects of viscoplasticity on the formation of the jet as a result of the collapsing cavity: (a) variation of the depth $\mathcal {H}$ of the cavity at its axis with time. The inset shows the definition of $\mathcal {H}$. Modulus of the deformation tensor $\|\boldsymbol {\mathcal {D}}\|$ for the collapse of the bubble cavity and formation of the jet for (b) $\mathcal {J} = 0.1$ and (c) $\mathcal {J} = 0.3$. Note that each kink in panel (a) is associated with the formation of a drop, as illustrated in the insets of panel (b). For all the cases in this figure, $Oh = 10^{-2}$. Movies 7–8 are available in the supplementary material.

4. What happens to the initial surface energy?

To better understand the bubble bursting dynamics in a viscoplastic medium, we also looked at the energy budgets. The total energy $E$ is the sum of the total kinetic energy of the liquid pool $E_k$, its surface energy $E_s$ and the energy dissipation $E_d$. The latter contains two parts owing to viscous ($E_d^{Oh}$) and yield stress ($E_d^{\mathcal {J}}$) contributions, $E_d = E_d^{Oh} +E_d^{\mathcal {J}}$. Lastly, small energies associated with jet breakup and airflow are summarised in $E_m$. Hence,

(4.1)\begin{equation} E = E_k(t) + E_s(t) + E_d(t) + E_m(t) = E_i, \end{equation}

where, $E_i$ is the initial energy that is purely the surface energy. Readers are referred to Appendix D for details for calculating the energy budget.

Figure 5 shows three representative examples of these energy budgets, normalised by the initial energy $E_i$. In figure 5, the time is normalised by the stoppage time $t_s$. Panel (a) shows the temporal evolution of different modes of the energy transfer for a low $\mathcal {J}$ number. Initially, at $t = 0$, the system's total energy is stored as the bubble-cavity surface energy. As the flow starts, a part of this surface energy converts to the kinetic energy of the flow generated by the travelling capillary waves. The kinetic energy reaches a maximum when the capillary waves focus at the bottom of the cavity, because the focusing process forms a region of high velocity. At the instant of focusing, for $\mathcal {J} = 0.1$ and $Oh = 10^{-1}$, $\sim$60 % of the initial energy is still present in the system as a sum of the kinetic and surface energy of the liquid pool. Subsequently, a Worthington jet forms and high dissipation is observed owing to an increase in the strain rate (see (D3)). The surface energy decreases monotonically throughout the process and reaches a finite near-zero value at the stoppage time $t_s$. This behaviour is different from a Newtonian liquid, where the surface energy would become exactly zero, as $t \to \infty$.

Figure 5. Energy budget for the process of the bubble bursting in a viscoplastic medium: temporal evolution of the different modes of energy transfers for (a) $\mathcal {J} =0.1$ and $Oh =10^{-1}$, (b) $\mathcal {J} = 1.0$ and $Oh =10^{-1}$ and (c) $\mathcal {J} =1.0$ and $Oh =10^{-2}$. (d) Comparison of the energy footprint at the stoppage time, $t = t_s$ for different $\mathcal {J}$ and $Oh$.

For $\mathcal {J} = 1.0$ (figure 5b,c), initially, the surface energy decreases monotonically until it reaches a plateau at $t = t_s$. However, contrary to the example with a small value of $\mathcal {J}$, in these cases, a major part of the cavity never yields. Consequently, more than 70 % for $Oh =10^{-1}$ and over 60 % for $Oh =10^{-2}$ of the initial energy is still stored as the crater's surface energy. In addition, note that in the limit of large $\mathcal {J}$ (and low $Oh$), yield stress is responsible for the majority of energy dissipation, i.e. $E_d^{Oh} \ll E_d^{\mathcal {J}}$.

The energy footprint at $t = t_s$ gives insight into the final static shape of the bubble. Therefore, we compare these energies for different $\mathcal {J}$ and $Oh$ numbers in figure 5(d). For all the conditions, $E_k \to 0$, and only surface energy remains in the system at the stoppage time. The remainder of the energy $(E_i - E_s)$ features as dissipation (except for those cases where drops form and $E_m$ is not negligible).

For low values of $\mathcal {J}$, the final surface energy $E_s$ is close to zero because the final craters are shallow (see § 5 for details). This residual surface energy increases with increasing $\mathcal {J}$ and $Oh$; however, the dependency on $Oh$ is negligible at higher values of $\mathcal {J}$. Finally, the dissipation owing to the yield stress $(E_d^{\mathcal {J}})$ contributes more to the overall dissipation for small $Oh$ numbers.

5. Final crater shapes

The process of bubble bursting in yield-stress fluids results in non-flat final shapes. Figure 6 shows the final crater shapes as observed for different $\mathcal {J}$ and $Oh$ numbers, and figure 7 quantifies the different features of these final shapes by analysing the location $(\theta _f)$ and strength $(\|\kappa _f\|)$ of the strongest capillary wave and the final depth of the crater $(\mathcal {H}_f)$. For the convenience of comparison, we normalise $\mathcal {H}_f$ by its initial value $\mathcal {H}_i \approx 2$ and $\|\kappa _f\|$ by the initial curvature of the bottom of the cavity $\|\kappa _i\| \approx 2$.

Figure 6. Final crater shapes: variation of the final shapes with the $Oh$ at (a) $\mathcal {J} = 0.2$, (b) $\mathcal {J} = 0.4$, (c) $\mathcal {J} = 0.6$, (d) $\mathcal {J} = 1.0$, (e) $\mathcal {J} = 5.0$ and (f) $\mathcal {J} = 10.0$.

Figure 7. Quantifying the characteristics of the final shapes as a function of $\mathcal {J}$ at different $Oh$. (a) Depth $\mathcal {H}_f$ of centreline of the final cavity surface. (b) Location $\theta _f$ and (c) Strength $\|\kappa _f\|$ of the strongest capillary wave in the final crater. The grey dashed lines in panels (b) and (c) are guides to the eye.

At low values of yield stress ($\mathcal {J} \le 0.4$), the final shape of the crater strongly depends on $Oh$ (see figures 6a,b, and 7a). When both $\mathcal {J}$ and $Oh$ are small, a Worthington jet forms (see § 3.3 for detailed discussions) which relaxes back towards the flat surface as $t \to \infty$. This jet relaxation results in shallow final cavities. As $Oh$ increases, viscous dissipation dominates the flow, the capillary waves are damped, and the change in the final cavity height becomes minimal; hence, $\mathcal {H}_f \sim \mathcal {H}_i$. In fact, for $Oh > 10^{-1}$, the capillary wave's amplitude is so close to zero that it becomes impossible to track.

As the value of yield stress ($\mathcal {J}$) increases, the effective viscosity of the domain increases and hence the initial cavity deforms less. For a highly plastic medium, the capillary waves cannot yield the entire cavity. As a result, $\mathcal {H}_f = \mathcal {H}_i$ for $\mathcal {J} \ge 0.65$, independent of the values of $Oh$. For higher $Oh$, this transition is reached (marginally) earlier (e.g. $\mathcal {J} \ge 0.5$ for $Oh \ge 1.0$).

For the cases where the bottom of the cavity never yields (figure 6df), we characterise the final crater shapes based on the location and strength of the frozen capillary wave ($\theta _f$ and $\kappa _f$, respectively). The variations of these values are shown in figures 7(b) and 7(c). As $\mathcal {J}$ increases, the final location of the wave is closer to the initial value, $\theta _f \approx \theta _i$. Similarly, the strength of the final wave approaches the value defined by the initial condition, as $\mathcal {J}$ increases. For this regime, the effects of $Oh$ on the final shape seem to be negligible for $\mathcal {J} > 2$.

6. Regime map

In the present study, the two crucial control parameters to describe the process of bursting bubbles in a viscoplastic medium are the plastocapillary number $\mathcal {J}$, and the Ohnesorge number $Oh$. This section uses these dimensionless numbers to summarise the observed features explained in the text, providing a regime map (or phase diagram). Figure 8 shows this map for the bursting bubble process in a viscoplastic medium. Note that we have run more than 750 simulations to arrive at this regime map, but in figure 8 we only show a few representatives at the transition lines.

Figure 8. Regime map in terms of the plastocapillary number $\mathcal {J}$ and the Ohnesorge number $Oh$ showing the transitions between the different categories identified in the current study. The insets show a representative case from each of the four regimes, namely, formation of jet which breaks into droplets (blue), formation of jet without droplets (grey), the entire cavity collapses but the cavity centre never crosses the initial pool free surface (white) and a part of the cavity never yields (red). The symbols represent simulations at the different transition lines.

For Newtonian fluids, the previous studies have found that for $Oh > 0.03$, viscous stresses dominate over the surface tension, such that the Worthington jet does not break up into droplets (San Lee et al. Reference San Lee, Weon, Park, Je, Fezzaa and Lee2011; Ghabache et al. Reference Ghabache, Antkowiak, Josserand and Séon2014; Walls et al. Reference Walls, Henaux and Bird2015). In this work, at $\mathcal {J} = 0$, we have reproduced this transition $Oh$ number (see left axis in figure 8). Increasing $\mathcal {J}$ has a similar effect on the jet break up as it manifests itself as increased apparent viscosity of the liquid. Consequently, even when $Oh \to 0$ the capillary waves get severely damped for $\mathcal {J} > 0.3$, and no droplets are formed. The blue area in figure 8 highlights the region in which a Worthington jet forms and disintegrates.

The grey area in figure 8 shows an intermediate regime in which the jet forms and crosses the free-surface line $(\mathcal {Z} = 0)$ but does not break up. This transition, for $\mathcal {J} = 0$, occurs at $Oh \approx 10^{-1}$. For non-zero $\mathcal {J}$, the transition occurs at smaller values of $Oh$ as the jet (if it forms) has less kinetic energy and cannot cross the $\mathcal {Z} = 0$ line. If the jet does not form (beyond the grey area), the collapse of the cavity results in a crater (for $\mathcal {J} \ne 0$).

As discussed in § 3.2, if the surface tension stresses are high enough, the whole cavity yields. Otherwise, for large values of the yield stress $(\mathcal {J} \sim O(1))$, the plug region attached to the bottom of the cavity never yields. As a result, the bottom of the cavity does not move, i.e. $\mathcal {H}_f = \mathcal {H}_i$. This transition from a fully yielded cavity to the cavity with an unyielded bottom is highlighted in figure 8 with the red line.

7. Conclusions

In this work, we have studied the capillary-driven process of bursting bubbles in a viscoplastic medium. As with Newtonian fluids, flow begins when the rim, which connects the bubble cavity to the free surface retracts. Consequently, the fluid is yielded, and a train of capillary waves is generated. The yield stress significantly affects the flow structure inside the pool by making plug regions. The higher the value of the yield stress, the larger is the deviation from the Newtonian counterpart.

Following the analyses of Deike et al. (Reference Deike, Ghabache, Liger-Belair, Das, Zaleski, Popinet and Séon2018) and Gordillo & Rodríguez-Rodríguez (Reference Gordillo and Rodríguez-Rodríguez2019), we provided information on the dynamics of the capillary waves as they travel down the bubble cavity. In liquids with low yield stresses, the cavity collapse leads to a Worthington jet that might break up into drops as a result of a Rayleigh–Plateau instability. However, for liquids with a large yield stress, the jet vanishes. The energy budgets analysis gives insight into the dynamics by showing how the initial surface energy is dissipated. Eventually, in contrast to the Newtonian fluids, where the final state is always a flat film, bubble bursting in a viscoplastic medium results in final crater shapes with high residual surface energy. We have analysed the geometry of these shapes as a function of the governing control parameters, namely, the Ohnesorge and the plastocapillary numbers. Lastly, we use the same numbers to categorise the four different regimes in viscoplastic bubble bursting (see the phase diagram in figure 8).

Our study has direct applications in a range of industrial operations, where bubbles are present at the surface of a yield-stress fluid. The focus of this work is to compare the bursting bubble process in a yield-stress fluid with that of a Newtonian fluid, without the initial shape effects. However, once the exact shape of the bubble at the free surface is known, either from experiment or theory, one can calculate the resulting flow and compare with the present study. Moreover, the current results could be useful in analysing some geophysical flows, such as those in volcanic eruptions. In a broader perspective, the work presents a system in which surface tension and yield stress are the main factors. Such a system is of fundamental interest in design and manufacturing at small scales where capillary action is competing with the yield stress, e.g. in three-dimensional printing and coating with polymeric fluids (Rauzan et al. Reference Rauzan, Nelson, Lehman, Ewoldt and Nuzzo2018; Jalaal et al. Reference Jalaal, Schaarsberg, Visser and Lohse2019; Nelson et al. Reference Nelson, Schweizer, Rauzan, Nuzzo, Vermant and Ewoldt2019; Jalaal, Stoeber & Balmforth Reference Jalaal, Stoeber and Balmforth2021).

Supplementary movies

Supplementary movies are available at https://doi.org/10.1017/jfm.2021.489.

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank Andrea Prosperetti, Arup Kumar Das and Stéphaze Zaleski for insightful discussions about the Newtonian limit of the bursting-bubble process. We also want to thank Uddalok Sen, Rodrigo Ezeta and Carola Seyfert for comments on the manuscript. This work was carried out on the national e-infrastructure of SURFsara, a subsidiary of SURF cooperation, the collaborative ICT organisation for Dutch education and research.

Funding

The authors acknowledge the ERC Advanced Grant No. 740479-DDD.

Declaration of interests

The authors report no conflict of interest.

Appendix A. Governing equations

In this appendix, we describe the governing equations that describe the process of bursting bubbles in a viscoplastic medium. For an incompressible liquid, the continuity and momentum equations read

(A 1)\begin{gather} \boldsymbol{\nabla}\boldsymbol{\cdot}\boldsymbol{u} = 0, \end{gather}
(A 2)\begin{gather}\rho_l\left(\frac{\partial\boldsymbol{u}}{\partial t} + \boldsymbol{\nabla}\boldsymbol{\cdot}(\boldsymbol{uu})\right) ={-}\boldsymbol{\nabla} p + \boldsymbol{\nabla}\boldsymbol{\cdot}\boldsymbol{\tau} + \rho_l\boldsymbol{g}, \end{gather}

where $\boldsymbol {u}$ is the velocity vector, $\rho _l$ is the density of the liquid, $p$ is the pressure field, $\boldsymbol {\tau }$ is the stress tensor in liquid and $\boldsymbol {g}$ is the acceleration owing to gravity. We model the viscoplastic liquid medium as a non-Newtonian Bingham fluid with a yield stress, $\tau _y$. For such liquids, the constitutive equation are

(A 3) \begin{equation} \begin{cases} \boldsymbol{\mathcal{D}}=0 & \|\boldsymbol{\tau}\| < \tau_y,\\ \boldsymbol{\tau} =\left( \dfrac{\tau_y}{2 \|\boldsymbol{\mathcal{D}} \|} + \mu_l \right) & \|\boldsymbol{\tau}\| \geq \tau_y. \end{cases} \end{equation}

In the equation above, $\boldsymbol {\mathcal {D}} = (\boldsymbol {\nabla }\boldsymbol {u} + (\boldsymbol {\nabla }\boldsymbol {u})^{\text {T}})/2$ is the deformation tensor and $\mu _l$ the constant viscosity in the Bingham model. We adopt a regularised revision of (A3) in our numerical simulations, given by

(A 4)\begin{equation} \boldsymbol{\tau} = 2\min\left(\frac{\tau_y}{2\|\boldsymbol{\mathcal{D}}\|} + \mu_l, \mu_{max}\right) \boldsymbol{\mathcal{D}}. \end{equation}

In (A4), ${\tau _y}/({2\|\boldsymbol {\mathcal {D}}\|}) + \mu _l$ is the apparent viscosity $(\mu _{eff})$ of the liquid and $\mu _{max}$ is the ‘large’ regularisation viscosity, such that $\mu _{eff} \gets \min (\mu _{eff}, \mu _{max})$.

The same sets of mass and momentum conservation equations (A1)–(A2) are also solved for the gas phase, but now with constant density and viscosity. We use the inertia–capillary velocity $(V_\gamma )$ and inertial–capillary time $t_\gamma$ and the capillary stress $\tau _\gamma$ defined as

(A5a,b)\begin{gather} V_\gamma = \sqrt{\frac{\gamma}{\rho_lR_0}},\quad t_\gamma = \frac{R_0}{V_\gamma} = \sqrt{\frac{\rho_lR_0^3}{\gamma}}, \end{gather}
(A6)\begin{gather}\tau_\gamma = \frac{\gamma}{R_0}, \end{gather}

to non-dimensionalise the preceding governing equations to find (2.1) to (2.4ac).

Appendix B. The Newtonian limit

One of the essential and widely studied features of the bursting bubble process in a Newtonian liquid is the resulting Worthington jet velocity. The jet is formed because of the strong flow-focusing caused by the capillary waves at the bottom of the bubble cavity. In general, this process is very fast, as shown in figure 9(a). Over a small time span of $\approx 0.1t_\gamma$ (see insets of figure 9), the jet traverses a distance of $\approx 1.5R_0$. Moreover, the inception of the jet is characterised by velocities as high as $50V_\gamma$. The jet flow is also associated with high viscous dissipation (because of the high strain rates resulting from such high velocities). As a result of these two processes, there is a distinct maximum at the instant of jet inception $(v_{j,1})$. This velocity might be difficult to calculate, especially at low $Oh$ numbers because of high-frequency capillary waves. Numerically, it is easiest to calculate the velocity of the jet as it crosses the free surface, $\mathcal {Z} = 0$ (grey dotted line in figure 9a). However, in experiments, it is easier to calculate the velocity of the first droplet that forms as a result of the jet break up. In the inset of figure 9(a), the instant immediately before jet break up into a droplet gives a velocity of $v_{j,3}$. As a result, in the literature, different authors have reported different jet velocities. We have decided to plot all three velocities (wherever applicable) in figure 9(b) along with the scaling laws proposed by Deike et al. (Reference Deike, Ghabache, Liger-Belair, Das, Zaleski, Popinet and Séon2018) (grey line) and Gordillo & Rodríguez-Rodríguez (Reference Gordillo and Rodríguez-Rodríguez2019) (green, red and blue lines). Our results agree well with the previously published works, which have been extensively validated with experimental data. Note that the differences between our data points and those of Gordillo & Rodríguez-Rodríguez (Reference Gordillo and Rodríguez-Rodríguez2019) also arise because of a slight difference in Bond numbers for the two studies ($\mathcal {B}o = 5\times 10^{-2}$ in Gordillo & Rodríguez-Rodríguez (Reference Gordillo and Rodríguez-Rodríguez2019) as compared with $\mathcal {B}o = 10^{-3}$ in Deike et al. (Reference Deike, Ghabache, Liger-Belair, Das, Zaleski, Popinet and Séon2018) and in the present work). This disagreement is higher for high $Oh$ numbers. Furthermore, as pointed out by Deike et al. (Reference Deike, Ghabache, Liger-Belair, Das, Zaleski, Popinet and Séon2018), at lower $\mathcal {B}o$, the maxima in the $v_j - Oh$ plot shifts to the right with higher velocities, a feature which is distinctly captured by figure 9(b).

Figure 9. Characterisation of the Worthington jet velocity formed as a result of the bursting bubble process in Newtonian liquids: (a) variation of the jet velocity as it travels through different axial locations ($Oh = 10^{-2}$). The inset shows the shape of this jet at different time. The grey dotted line represents the free surface, $\mathcal {Z} = 0$. (b) Comparison of the jet velocity with the data and scaling laws available in the literature for the range of Ohnesorge numbers used in this study. Note that the scaling law in solid grey line comes from Deike et al. (Reference Deike, Ghabache, Liger-Belair, Das, Zaleski, Popinet and Séon2018), whereas the other lines are from Gordillo & Rodríguez-Rodríguez (Reference Gordillo and Rodríguez-Rodríguez2019) as noted in the figure.

Figure 10(a) shows the temporal evolution of the angular trajectory of the strongest capillary wave as it travels down the bubble cavity. As predicted by Gordillo & Rodríguez-Rodríguez (Reference Gordillo and Rodríguez-Rodríguez2019) and shown experimentally by Krishnan et al. (Reference Krishnan, Hopfinger and Puthenveettil2017), this wave travels at a constant angular velocity, implying $\theta _c - \theta _i \sim -V_\gamma t$ (grey dotted line in figure 10a). Furthermore, we also compare the strength of this wave with those predicted by the scaling laws given in Gordillo & Rodríguez-Rodríguez (Reference Gordillo and Rodríguez-Rodríguez2019) and found good agreement (figure 10b).

Figure 10. (a) Variation of the location $\theta _c$ of the strongest capillary wave with time. The grey dotted line denotes $\theta _c - \theta _i \sim -V_\gamma t$ as described by Gordillo & Rodríguez-Rodríguez (Reference Gordillo and Rodríguez-Rodríguez2019). (b) Variation of the strength $\|\kappa _c^*\|$ at $\theta _c = {\rm \pi}/2$ with the $Oh$ numbers. The scaling laws are taken from Gordillo & Rodríguez-Rodríguez (Reference Gordillo and Rodríguez-Rodríguez2019).

Appendix C. The effect of $Oh$

This appendix describes the dynamics of bursting bubbles and the qualitative effects of varying Ohnesorge number $Oh$ at a given plastocapillary number of $\mathcal {J}=0.1$. Figure 11 illustrates four representative cases for this purpose. As noted in the text and several previous studies (Duchemin et al. Reference Duchemin, Popinet, Josserand and Zaleski2002; Deike et al. Reference Deike, Ghabache, Liger-Belair, Das, Zaleski, Popinet and Séon2018; Gordillo & Rodríguez-Rodríguez Reference Gordillo and Rodríguez-Rodríguez2019), the initial retraction of the rim forms a train of capillary waves. For low Ohnesorge numbers, e.g. $Oh = 10^{-3}$ in figure 11(a), viscous dissipation is very small, and as a result, most of these capillary waves converge at the bottom of the cavity and result in vigorous surface undulations here (figure 11a: $t = 0.1 - 0.50$). These waves result in a thick Worthington jet. As $Oh$ increases ($Oh = 10^{-2}$ in figure 11b), viscous dissipation damps the high-frequency capillary waves and improves the flow focusing at the bottom of the cavity, leading to thinner and faster jets. This process is similar to what has been reported in the literature for Newtonian liquids (Duchemin et al. Reference Duchemin, Popinet, Josserand and Zaleski2002; Ghabache et al. Reference Ghabache, Antkowiak, Josserand and Séon2014; Deike et al. Reference Deike, Ghabache, Liger-Belair, Das, Zaleski, Popinet and Séon2018). Note that figure 11(b) is the same as figure 2(b) and has been presented again for completeness.

Figure 11. Bursting bubble dynamics for different Ohnesorge numbers: (a) $Oh = 10^{-3}$, (b) $Oh = 10^{-2}$, (c) $Oh = 10^{-1}$ and (d) $Oh = 10^{0}$. In the background, the left part of each panel shows the magnitude of the velocity field and the right part shows the magnitude of the deformation tensor on a $\log _{10}$ scale. For all the cases in this figure, $\mathcal {J} = 0.1$. Movies (2 and 9–10) are available in the supplementary material.

Larger $Oh$ numbers ($10^{-1}$ and $10^{0}$ in figures 11c and 11d, respectively) result in longer flow timescales. Nonetheless, at low $\mathcal {J}$ numbers (such as $0.1$ in figure 11), the entire cavity still yields and the centre gently approaches the free surface at $\mathcal {Z} = 0$ (figure 11b,c: first three columns). Most of the initial surface energy is lost as viscous dissipation (both $E_d^{Oh}$ and $E_d^{\mathcal {J}}$) and the flow stops as the internal stresses in the fluid fall below the yield stress (figure 11b,c: last column).

Appendix D. Energy budget calculations

Here, we describe the formulation used to evaluate the different energy transfer modes discussed in § 4. A similar approach was used by Wildeman et al. (Reference Wildeman, Visser, Sun and Lohse2016) and Ramírez-Soto et al. (Reference Ramírez-Soto, Sanjay, Lohse, Pham and Vollmer2020) to evaluate the energy budget for impacting droplets and colliding droplets, respectively. In this work, we have extended the methodology to yield-stress liquids. The kinetic and the surface energy of the liquid are given by

(D 1)\begin{gather} E_k = \tfrac{1}{2}\int_{\varOmega_p}\|\boldsymbol{u}\|^2\,\mathrm{d}\varOmega_p, \end{gather}
(D 2)\begin{gather}E_s = \int_{\varGamma_p} \mathrm{d}\varGamma_p, \end{gather}

respectively, where the energies are normalised by the surface energy $\gamma R_0^2$. The integrals are evaluated over the volume $(\varOmega _p)$ and the surface $(\varGamma _p)$ of the largest liquid continuum in the domain, disregarding drops (which are included in the energy budget in a different way, and described below). The state of the liquid pool with a flat free surface is taken as the reference to calculate $E_s$.

Extending the Newtonian fluid formulation in Landau & Lifshitz (Reference Landau and Lifshitz1987, pp. 50–51), the total dissipation in our system can be calculated as

(D 3)\begin{equation} E_d = 2\int_t\left(\int_{\varOmega_p}\left(Oh + \frac{\mathcal{J}}{2\|\boldsymbol{\mathcal{D}}\|}\right)\|\boldsymbol{\mathcal{D}}\|^2\,\mathrm{d}\varOmega_p\right)\mathrm{d}t. \end{equation}

Note that by writing the equation in this form, we assume that the yield stress contributes to the energy dissipation only through an increase in the effective viscosity (see Appendix A). In order to isolate the effects of the viscosity and yield-stress associated viscosity, we can rewrite (D3) as $E_d = E_d^{Oh} + E_d^{\mathcal {J}}$, where

(D 4)\begin{gather} E_d^{Oh} = 2 Oh\int_t\left(\int_{\varOmega_p}\|\boldsymbol{\mathcal{D}}\|^2\,\mathrm{d}\varOmega_p\right)\mathrm{d}t, \end{gather}
(D 5)\begin{gather}E_d^{\mathcal{J}} = \mathcal{J}\int_t\left(\int_{\varOmega_p}\|\boldsymbol{\mathcal{D}}\|\,\mathrm{d}\varOmega_p\right)\mathrm{d}t. \end{gather}

We present together all other forms of energy as

(D 6)\begin{equation} E_m = E_k^{Drops} + E_s^{Drops} + E_d^{Drops} + \int_{\varOmega_p+\varOmega_d}\mathcal{B}o\,\mathcal{Z}\,\mathrm{d}(\varOmega_p+\varOmega_d) + E_g. \end{equation}

In (D6), the first two terms, $E_k^{Drops}$ and $E_s^{Drops}$ denote the kinetic and the surface energies of the ejected drops, respectively. The third term, $E_d^{Drops}$, is the sum of the effective dissipation inside the drop. Note that all three terms are evaluated in the same way as (D1) to D5, with one difference; that the volume and surface integrals are performed over the drops ($\varOmega _d$ and $\varGamma _d$, respectively), instead of over the pool ($\varOmega _p$ and $\varGamma _p$, respectively). The next term evaluates the gravitational potential energy for the liquid (both the pool and the drops). As $\mathcal {B}o \to 0$, this term becomes insignificant. Lastly, $E_g$ denotes the sum of energies stored in the gas medium and viscous dissipation owing to velocity gradients inside it, and is written

(D 7)\begin{equation} E_g = \rho_r\int_{\varOmega_g}\left(\frac{\|\boldsymbol{v}\|^2}{2} + \mathcal{B}o\,\mathcal{Z}\right)\mathrm{d}\varOmega_g + 2\mu_gOh\int_t\left(\int_{\varOmega_g}\|\boldsymbol{\mathcal{D}}\|^2\,\mathrm{d}\varOmega_g\right)\mathrm{d}t. \end{equation}

$E_m$ (D6) is only significant when the resultant Worthington jet leads to the formation of droplets (figure 5c).

Appendix E. Code availability and choosing numerical parameters

For our calculations, we use the free software program Basilisk C (Popinet & collaborators Reference Popinet2013–2021a; Popinet Reference Popinet2015). To ensure reproducibility, the codes used in the present article are permanently available at Sanjay (Reference Sanjay2020). Furthermore, § 2 contains major computational choices and parameters employed in the current study. In this appendix, we provide further details and reasons for selecting the critical parameters in light of the regularisation method.

E.1. Viscous regularisation parameter

To verify that the macroscopic flow features were independent of the regularisation parameter, we conducted simulations for different $Oh_{max}$. We show a representative case for this test in figure 12. Using a small value of $Oh_{max}$, such as $10^0$ in figure 12(a-i), the process resembles a case with increased effective viscosity. However, at higher values of $Oh_{max}$ ($10^4$ for figure 12(a-ii) or $10^8$ for figure 12(a-iii)), the process is independent of a viscous regularisation parameter. To ensure that the flow is captured precisely, the liquid kinetic energy is also tracked over time (figure 12b). For $Oh_{max} > 10^2$, there are negligible differences between the cases.

Figure 12. Sensitivity to viscous regularisation parameter $Oh_{max}$: temporal evolution of the bubble cavity for (a) $Oh_{max} =$ (i) $10^0$, (ii) $10^4$ and (iii) $10^8$ and (b) Kinetic energy evolution in time. The results show negligible differences for $Oh_{max} > 10^2$.

Comparing the values of $\|\boldsymbol {\mathcal {D}}\|$, it is shown that the flow patterns are unchanged for the given large values of $Oh_{max}$. Furthermore, one could clearly distinguish a sharp transition between a weakly deformed region as compared to a strongly deformed one. However, we would like to mention that the identification of the yield surface is obscured, when regularised constitutive models are used (cf. Frigaard & Nouar (Reference Frigaard and Nouar2005)). Nevertheless, irrespective of such details, the map of the second invariant of the deformation-rate tensor provides important information on flow patterns inside viscoplastic medium.

E.2. Stoppage time

Another important consequence of yield stress is a finite stoppage time. The flow in a liquid will stop if the stress falls below the yield stress. This implies that $\|\boldsymbol {\mathcal {D}}\|$ should vanish. Because we use a regularisation method, the flow in our simulations never truly stops. Hence, we consider a cut-off kinetic energy of $10^{-6}\times \max (E_k^{Total})$, where

(E 1)\begin{equation} E_k^{Total} = 0.5\int_\varOmega(\|\boldsymbol{u}\|^2 + \rho_r\|\boldsymbol{v}\|^2)\,\mathrm{d}\varOmega \end{equation}

is the total kinetic energy of the system. We stop the calculations when the total kinetic energy of the system is below the cut-off. To verify the sensitivity of this cut-off, we ran a number of simulations up to $t = 2t_s$ (figure 13). Clearly, independent of the $Oh$ number, the flow becomes asymptotically stationary beyond $t = t_s$. A sharp decrease in the total kinetic energy can be observed in the semi-log inset plots of figures 13(a) and 13(b), as stoppage time is approached. Note that, this analysis only provides an estimation for the stoppage time, $t_s$ and a more comprehensive study is required to find the exact values of $t_s$. Nonetheless, as is clear from our results (similar to those shown in figures 2 and 13), beyond this time, the flow dynamics are too slow for any macroscopic change in the location or the strength of the capillary waves, or the shape of the final cavity.

Figure 13. Selection of stoppage time: variation of the kinetic energy of the liquid, $E_k$ (see (E1)) with time for eight representative cases: (a) $\mathcal {J} = 0.1$ and $Oh = 10^{-3} - 10^0$ and (b) $\mathcal {J} = 1.0$ and $Oh = 10^{-3} - 10^0$. The inset of each figure shows the kinetic energy normalised by the maximum kinetic energy on a semi-log scale. We define a finite stoppage time, $t = t_s$ beyond which the flow is too slow to cause any macroscopic changes in the timescales we wish to study.

E.3. Initial rim curvature effects

As mentioned in § 2.3, in our initial shape, we introduced a rim with a finite curvature $\kappa _0$ that connects the bubble to the free surface. The initial location of the cavity-free surface intersection $\theta _i$ also changes (inset of figure 14a), depending on this regularised curvature. In this appendix, we will show how this initial condition affects the bubble bursting process. For all the cases presented in this work, we have used $\kappa _0 = 100$. For Newtonian cases, Deike et al. (Reference Deike, Ghabache, Liger-Belair, Das, Zaleski, Popinet and Séon2018) have carried out a more extensive sensitivity test to ascertain the importance of initial cavity shape on the process. For $\mathcal {J} = 0$, our results support their findings, that the size of the initial hole around the axis ($\mathcal {R} = 0$) is crucial, and can manifest into changes in the jet velocity. Furthermore, $\kappa _0$ controls the first capillary waves that appear as the bubble cavity collapses (§ 3.2). Figures 9 and 10 show that our results agree with Deike et al. (Reference Deike, Ghabache, Liger-Belair, Das, Zaleski, Popinet and Séon2018) and Gordillo & Rodríguez-Rodríguez (Reference Gordillo and Rodríguez-Rodríguez2019), which have been validated with experiments.

Figure 14. Sensitivity to initial rim curvature: (a) temporal evolution of the location of the strongest capillary wave $\theta _c$, and (b) Influence on the overall process of cavity collapse. Beyond, $t = 0.2$, there is negligible difference between the interfaces as the effect of the initial conditions vanish. Inset in (a) zooms into the initial stages of the process where the influence of $\|\kappa _0\|$ is apparent.

For higher $\mathcal {J}$ values, it is essential that $\|\kappa _0\| > \mathcal {J}$ for flow initiation. We have restricted our study to $\mathcal {J} = 64$ where the flow is confined in the region of this high curvature (see § 5). Furthermore, figure 14 contains one representative case where we show the influence of $\kappa _0$ on the temporal evolution of the strongest capillary wave as it travels down the bubble cavity (figure 14a), and also on the interface deformations (figure 14b). As shown in these curves the difference in the results is negligible when $\|\kappa _0\| > 75$.

References

REFERENCES

Balmforth, N.J., Frigaard, I.A. & Ovarlez, G. 2014 Yielding to stress: recent developments in viscoplastic fluid mechanics. Annu. Rev. Fluid Mech. 46, 121146.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bird, R.B., Dai, G.C. & Yarusso, B.J. 1983 The rheology and flow of viscoplastic materials. Rev. Chem. Engng 1 (1), 170.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bonn, D., Denn, M.M., Berthier, L., Divoux, T. & Manneville, S. 2017 Yield stress materials in soft condensed matter. Rev. Mod. Phys. 89 (3), 035005.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boulton-Stone, J.M. & Blake, J.R. 1993 Gas bubbles bursting at a free surface. J. Fluid Mech. 254, 437466.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bourouiba, L. 2021 The fluid dynamics of disease transmission. Annu. Rev. Fluid Mech. 53, 473508.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brackbill, J.U., Kothe, D.B. & Zemach, C. 1992 A continuum method for modeling surface tension. J. Comput. Phys. 100 (2), 335354.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coussot, P. 2014 Yield stress fluid flows: a review of experimental data. J. Non-Newtonian Fluid Mech. 211, 3149.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
De Corato, M., Saint-Michel, B., Makrigiorgos, G., Dimakopoulos, Y., Tsamopoulos, J. & Garbin, V. 2019 Oscillations of small bubbles and medium yielding in elastoviscoplastic fluids. Phys. Rev. Fluids 4 (7), 073301.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Deike, L., Ghabache, E., Liger-Belair, G., Das, A.K., Zaleski, S., Popinet, S. & Séon, T. 2018 Dynamics of jets produced by bursting bubbles. Phys. Rev. Fluids 3 (1), 013603.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Deserno, M. 2004 Notes on differential geometry. Available at: https://www.cmu.edu/biolphys/deserno/pdf/diff_geom.pdf (Last accessed: March 31, 2021).Google Scholar
Dimakopoulos, Y., Pavlidis, M. & Tsamopoulos, J. 2013 Steady bubble rise in Herschel–Bulkley fluids and comparison of predictions via the Augmented Lagrangian Method with those via the Papanastasiou model. J. Non-Newtonian Fluid Mech. 200, 3451.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dubash, N. & Frigaard, I. 2004 Conditions for static bubbles in viscoplastic fluids. Phys. Fluids 16 (12), 43194330.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Duchemin, L., Popinet, S., Josserand, C. & Zaleski, S. 2002 Jet formation in bubbles bursting at a free surface. Phys. Fluids 14 (9), 30003008.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frigaard, I.A. & Nouar, C. 2005 On the usage of viscosity regularisation methods for visco-plastic fluid flow computation. J. Non-Newtonian Fluid Mech. 127 (1), 126.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gañán-Calvo, A.M. 2017 Revision of bubble bursting: universal scaling laws of top jet drop size and speed. Phys. Rev. Lett. 119 (20), 204502.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gekle, S., Gordillo, J.é M., van der Meer, D. & Lohse, D. 2009 High-speed jet formation after solid object impact. Phys. Rev. Lett. 102 (3), 034502.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ghabache, E., Antkowiak, A., Josserand, C. & Séon, T. 2014 On the physics of fizziness: how bubble bursting controls droplets ejection. Phys. Fluids 26 (12), 121701.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ghabache, E., Liger-Belair, G., Antkowiak, A. & Séon, T. 2016 Evaporation of droplets in a champagne wine aerosol. Sci. Rep. 6, 25148.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ghabache, E. & Séon, T. 2016 Size of the top jet drop produced by bubble bursting. Phys. Rev. Fluids 1 (5), 051901.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gonnermann, H.M. & Manga, M. 2007 The fluid mechanics inside a volcano. Annu. Rev. Fluid Mech. 39, 321356.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gordillo, J.M. & Rodríguez-Rodríguez, J. 2019 Capillary waves control the ejection of bubble bursting jets. J. Fluid Mech. 867, 556571.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jalaal, M. & Balmforth, N.J. 2016 Long bubbles in tubes filled with viscoplastic fluid. J. Non-Newtonian Fluid Mech. 238, 100106.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jalaal, M., Schaarsberg, M.K., Visser, C.-W. & Lohse, D. 2019 Laser-induced forward transfer of viscoplastic fluids. J. Fluid Mech. 880, 497513.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jalaal, M., Stoeber, B. & Balmforth, N.J 2021 Spreading of viscoplastic droplets. J. Fluid Mech. 914, A21.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krishnan, S., Hopfinger, E.J. & Puthenveettil, B.A. 2017 On the scaling of jetting from bubble collapse at a liquid surface. J. Fluid Mech. 822, 791812.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Laborie, B., Rouyer, F., Angelescu, D.E & Lorenceau, E. 2017 Yield-stress fluid deposition in circular channels. J. Fluid Mech. 818 (2), 838851.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Landau, L.D. & Lifshitz, E.M. 1987 Fluid Mechanics – Volume 6: Course of Theoretical Physics, 2nd edn. Elsevier.Google Scholar
Lhuissier, H. & Villermaux, E. 2012 Bursting bubble aerosols. J. Fluid Mech. 696, 544.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Liger-Belair, G. 2012 The physics behind the fizz in champagne and sparkling wines. Eur. Phys. J. Spec. Top. 201 (1), 188.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Liger-Belair, G., Polidori, G. & Jeandet, P. 2008 Recent advances in the science of champagne bubbles. Chem. Soc. Rev. 37 (11), 24902511.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lohse, D., Bergmann, R., Mikkelsen, R., Zeilstra, C., van der Meer, D., Versluis, M., van der Weele, K., van der Hoef, M. & Kuipers, H. 2004 Impact on soft sand: void collapse and jet formation. Phys. Rev. Lett. 93 (19), 198003.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Longuet-Higgins, M.S. & Oguz, H. 1995 Critical microjets in collapsing cavities. J. Fluid Mech. 290, 183201.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lopez, W.F., Naccache, M.F. & de Souza Mendes, P.R. 2018 Rising bubbles in yield stress materials. J. Rheol. 62 (1), 209219.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MacIntyre, F. 1972 Flow patterns in breaking bubbles. J. Geophys. Res. 77 (27), 52115228.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Magnaudet, J. & Mercier, M.J. 2020 Particles, drops, and bubbles moving across sharp interfaces and stratified layers. Annu. Rev. Fluid Mech. 52, 6191.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mason, B.J. 1954 Bursting of air bubbles at the surface of sea water. Nature 174 (4427), 470471.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mougin, N., Magnin, A. & Piau, J.-M. 2012 The significant influence of internal stresses on the dynamics of bubbles in a yield stress fluid. J. Non-Newtonian Fluid Mech. 171, 4255.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nelson, A.Z., Schweizer, K.S., Rauzan, B.M., Nuzzo, R.G., Vermant, J. & Ewoldt, R.H. 2019 Designing and transforming yield-stress fluids. Curr. Opin. Solid State Mater. Sci. 23 (5), 100758.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Popinet, S. 2003 Gerris: a tree-based adaptive solver for the incompressible euler equations in complex geometries. J. Comput. Phys. 190 (2), 572600.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Popinet, S. 2009 An accurate adaptive solver for surface-tension-driven interfacial flows. J. Comput. Phys. 228 (16), 58385866.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Popinet, S. 2015 A quadtree-adaptive multigrid solver for the Serre–Green–Naghdi equations. J. Comput. Phys. 302, 336358.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Popinet, S. & collaborators 2013–2021a Basilisk C. Available at: http://basilisk.fr (Last accessed: March 31, 2021).Google Scholar
Popinet, S. & collaborators 2013–2021b Basilisk C: surface tension library. Available at: http://basilisk.fr/src/tension.h (Last accessed: March 31, 2021).Google Scholar
Poulain, S. & Bourouiba, L. 2018 Biosurfactants change the thinning of contaminated bubbles at bacteria-laden water interfaces. Phys. Rev. Lett. 121 (20), 204502.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Princen, H.M. 1963 Shape of a fluid drop at a liquid-liquid interface. J. Colloid Sci. 18 (2), 178195.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ramírez-Soto, O., Sanjay, V., Lohse, D., Pham, J.T. & Vollmer, D. 2020 Lifting a sessile oil drop from a superamphiphobic surface with an impacting one. Sci. Adv. 6 (34), eaba4330.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rauzan, B.M., Nelson, A.Z., Lehman, S.E., Ewoldt, R.H. & Nuzzo, R.G. 2018 Particle-free emulsions for 3d printing elastomers. Adv. Funct. Mater. 28 (21), 1707032.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
San Lee, J., Weon, B.M., Park, S.J., Je, J.H, Fezzaa, K. & Lee, W.-K. 2011 Size limits the formation of liquid jets during bubble bursting. Nat. Commun. 2 (1), 17.Google Scholar
Sanjay, V. 2020 Code repository: Bursting bubble in a viscoplastic medium. Available at: https://github.com/VatsalSy/BurstingBubbleInViscoplasticMedium (Last accessed: March 31, 2021).Google Scholar
Sikorski, D., Tabuteau, H. & de Bruyn, J.R. 2009 Motion and shape of bubbles rising through a yield-stress fluid. J. Non-Newtonian Fluid Mech. 159 (1-3), 1016.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Singh, D. & Das, A.K. 2019 Numerical investigation of the collapse of a static bubble at the free surface in the presence of neighbors. Phys. Rev. Fluids 4 (2), 023602.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Singh, J.P. & Denn, M.M. 2008 Interacting two-dimensional bubbles and droplets in a yield-stress fluid. Phys. Fluids 20 (4), 040901.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sun, B., Pan, S., Zhang, J., Zhao, X., Zhao, Y. & Wang, Z. 2020 A dynamic model for predicting the geometry of bubble entrapped in yield stress fluid. Chem. Engng J. 391, 123569.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Toba, Y. 1959 Drop production by bursting of air bubbles on the sea surface (ii) theoretical study on the shape of floating bubbles. J. Oceanogr. Soc. Japan 15 (3), 121130.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tripathi, M.K., Sahu, K.C., Karapetsas, G. & Matar, O.K. 2015 Bubble rise dynamics in a viscoplastic material. J. Non-Newtonian Fluid Mech. 222, 217226.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tryggvason, G., Scardovelli, R. & Zaleski, S. 2011 Direct Numerical Simulations of Gas–Liquid Multiphase Flows. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Tsamopoulos, J., Dimakopoulos, Y., Chatzidai, N., Karapetsas, G. & Pavlidis, M. 2008 Steady bubble rise and deformation in newtonian and viscoplastic fluids and conditions for bubble entrapment. J. Fluid Mech. 601, 123164.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vignes-Adler, M. 2013 The fizzling foam of champagne. Angew. Chem. Intl Ed. 52 (1), 187190.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Walls, P.L.L., Henaux, L. & Bird, J.C. 2015 Jet drops from bursting bubbles: how gravity and viscosity couple to inhibit droplet production. Phys. Rev. E 92 (2), 021002.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wildeman, S., Visser, C.W., Sun, C. & Lohse, D. 2016 On the spreading of impacting drops. J. Fluid Mech. 805, 636655.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zamankhan, P., Takayama, S. & Grotberg, J.B. 2018 Steady displacement of long gas bubbles in channels and tubes filled by a Bingham fluid. Phys. Rev. Fluids 3 (1), 013302.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zeff, B.W., Kleber, B., Fineberg, J. & Lathrop, D.P. 2000 Singularity dynamics in curvature collapse and jet eruption on a fluid surface. Nature 403 (6768), 401404.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Figure 0

Figure 1. Schematics for the process of a bursting bubble: (a) a gas bubble in bulk. (b) The bubble approaches the free surface forming a liquid film (thickness $\delta$) between itself and the free surface. (c) A bubble cavity forms when the thin liquid film disappears.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Bursting bubble dynamics for different plastocapillary numbers. (a) $\mathcal {J} = 0.0$: a typical case with a Newtonian liquid medium, (b) $\mathcal {J} =0.1$: a weakly viscoplastic liquid medium in which the process still shows all the major characteristics of the Newtonian liquid, (c) $\mathcal {J} = 0.5$: a case of moderate yield stress whereby the jetting is suppressed, nonetheless the entire cavity still yields and (d) $\mathcal {J} = 1.0$: a highly viscoplastic liquid medium whereby a part of the cavity never yields. The left part of each panel shows the magnitude of the velocity field, and the right part shows the magnitude of the deformation tensor on a $\log _{10}$ scale. The transition to the black region (low strain rates) marks the yield-surface location in the present study. The time instances in this figure are chosen to show significant events throughout the process of bursting bubbles for different $\mathcal {J}$ numbers. For all the cases in this figure, $Oh = 10^{-2}$. Movies 1–3 are available in the supplementary material.

Figure 2

Figure 3. Effects of viscoplasticity on the travelling capillary waves. (a) Variation of the location $(\theta _c)$ of strongest capillary with time. The grey dotted line denotes the Newtonian limit, $\theta _c -\theta _i \sim -V_\gamma t$ as described by Gordillo & Rodríguez-Rodríguez (2019). (b) Variation of the strength $(\|\kappa _c\|)$ of the strongest capillary wave with time. Snapshots of the deformation tensor modulus $\|\boldsymbol {\mathcal {D}}\|$ for (c) $\mathcal {J} = 0.2$ and (d) $\mathcal {J} = 1.0$. For all the cases in this figure, $Oh = 10^{-2}$. Movies 4–6 are available in the supplementary material.

Figure 3

Figure 4. Effects of viscoplasticity on the formation of the jet as a result of the collapsing cavity: (a) variation of the depth $\mathcal {H}$ of the cavity at its axis with time. The inset shows the definition of $\mathcal {H}$. Modulus of the deformation tensor $\|\boldsymbol {\mathcal {D}}\|$ for the collapse of the bubble cavity and formation of the jet for (b) $\mathcal {J} = 0.1$ and (c) $\mathcal {J} = 0.3$. Note that each kink in panel (a) is associated with the formation of a drop, as illustrated in the insets of panel (b). For all the cases in this figure, $Oh = 10^{-2}$. Movies 7–8 are available in the supplementary material.

Figure 4

Figure 5. Energy budget for the process of the bubble bursting in a viscoplastic medium: temporal evolution of the different modes of energy transfers for (a) $\mathcal {J} =0.1$ and $Oh =10^{-1}$, (b) $\mathcal {J} = 1.0$ and $Oh =10^{-1}$ and (c) $\mathcal {J} =1.0$ and $Oh =10^{-2}$. (d) Comparison of the energy footprint at the stoppage time, $t = t_s$ for different $\mathcal {J}$ and $Oh$.

Figure 5

Figure 6. Final crater shapes: variation of the final shapes with the $Oh$ at (a) $\mathcal {J} = 0.2$, (b) $\mathcal {J} = 0.4$, (c) $\mathcal {J} = 0.6$, (d) $\mathcal {J} = 1.0$, (e) $\mathcal {J} = 5.0$ and (f) $\mathcal {J} = 10.0$.

Figure 6

Figure 7. Quantifying the characteristics of the final shapes as a function of $\mathcal {J}$ at different $Oh$. (a) Depth $\mathcal {H}_f$ of centreline of the final cavity surface. (b) Location $\theta _f$ and (c) Strength $\|\kappa _f\|$ of the strongest capillary wave in the final crater. The grey dashed lines in panels (b) and (c) are guides to the eye.

Figure 7

Figure 8. Regime map in terms of the plastocapillary number $\mathcal {J}$ and the Ohnesorge number $Oh$ showing the transitions between the different categories identified in the current study. The insets show a representative case from each of the four regimes, namely, formation of jet which breaks into droplets (blue), formation of jet without droplets (grey), the entire cavity collapses but the cavity centre never crosses the initial pool free surface (white) and a part of the cavity never yields (red). The symbols represent simulations at the different transition lines.

Figure 8

Figure 9. Characterisation of the Worthington jet velocity formed as a result of the bursting bubble process in Newtonian liquids: (a) variation of the jet velocity as it travels through different axial locations ($Oh = 10^{-2}$). The inset shows the shape of this jet at different time. The grey dotted line represents the free surface, $\mathcal {Z} = 0$. (b) Comparison of the jet velocity with the data and scaling laws available in the literature for the range of Ohnesorge numbers used in this study. Note that the scaling law in solid grey line comes from Deike et al. (2018), whereas the other lines are from Gordillo & Rodríguez-Rodríguez (2019) as noted in the figure.

Figure 9

Figure 10. (a) Variation of the location $\theta _c$ of the strongest capillary wave with time. The grey dotted line denotes $\theta _c - \theta _i \sim -V_\gamma t$ as described by Gordillo & Rodríguez-Rodríguez (2019). (b) Variation of the strength $\|\kappa _c^*\|$ at $\theta _c = {\rm \pi}/2$ with the $Oh$ numbers. The scaling laws are taken from Gordillo & Rodríguez-Rodríguez (2019).

Figure 10

Figure 11. Bursting bubble dynamics for different Ohnesorge numbers: (a) $Oh = 10^{-3}$, (b) $Oh = 10^{-2}$, (c) $Oh = 10^{-1}$ and (d) $Oh = 10^{0}$. In the background, the left part of each panel shows the magnitude of the velocity field and the right part shows the magnitude of the deformation tensor on a $\log _{10}$ scale. For all the cases in this figure, $\mathcal {J} = 0.1$. Movies (2 and 9–10) are available in the supplementary material.

Figure 11

Figure 12. Sensitivity to viscous regularisation parameter $Oh_{max}$: temporal evolution of the bubble cavity for (a) $Oh_{max} =$ (i) $10^0$, (ii) $10^4$ and (iii) $10^8$ and (b) Kinetic energy evolution in time. The results show negligible differences for $Oh_{max} > 10^2$.

Figure 12

Figure 13. Selection of stoppage time: variation of the kinetic energy of the liquid, $E_k$ (see (E1)) with time for eight representative cases: (a) $\mathcal {J} = 0.1$ and $Oh = 10^{-3} - 10^0$ and (b) $\mathcal {J} = 1.0$ and $Oh = 10^{-3} - 10^0$. The inset of each figure shows the kinetic energy normalised by the maximum kinetic energy on a semi-log scale. We define a finite stoppage time, $t = t_s$ beyond which the flow is too slow to cause any macroscopic changes in the timescales we wish to study.

Figure 13

Figure 14. Sensitivity to initial rim curvature: (a) temporal evolution of the location of the strongest capillary wave $\theta _c$, and (b) Influence on the overall process of cavity collapse. Beyond, $t = 0.2$, there is negligible difference between the interfaces as the effect of the initial conditions vanish. Inset in (a) zooms into the initial stages of the process where the influence of $\|\kappa _0\|$ is apparent.

Sanjay et al. supplementary movie 1

A typical case of bursting bubble in a Newtonian liquid medium: $\mathcal{J} = 0.0$ and $\mathcal{O}h = 10^{-2}$. The left part shows the magnitude of the velocity field, and the right part shows the magnitude of the Deformation tensor on a $\log_{10}$ scale. This video is associated with Figure 2 of the manuscript.

Download Sanjay et al. supplementary movie 1(Video)
Video 4 MB

Sanjay et al. supplementary movie 2

Bursting bubble in a weakly viscoplastic liquid medium in which the process still shows all the major characteristics of the Newtonian liquid: $\mathcal{J} = 0.1$ and $\mathcal{O}h = 10^{-2}$. The left part shows the magnitude of the velocity field, and the right part shows the magnitude of the Deformation tensor on a $\log_{10}$scale. This video is associated with Figures 2 and 11 of the manuscript.

Download Sanjay et al. supplementary movie 2(Video)
Video 3.2 MB

Sanjay et al. supplementary movie 3

Bursting bubble in a highly viscoplastic liquid medium: $\mathcal{J} = 1.0$ and $\mathcal{O}h = 10^{-2}$. The left part shows the magnitude of the velocity field, and the right part shows the magnitude of the Deformation tensor on a $\log_{10}$ scale. This video is associated with Figure 2 of the manuscript.

Download Sanjay et al. supplementary movie 3(Video)
Video 1.3 MB

Sanjay et al. supplementary movie 4

Angular trajectory of the travelling capillary wave during bursting bubble in a Newtonian liquid medium: $\mathcal{J} = 0.0$ and $\mathcal{O}h = 10^{-2}$. The grey dotted line denotes the Newtonian limit, $\theta_c - \theta_i \sim -V_\gamma t$ as described by Gordillo \& Rodríguez-Rodríguez (2019). The blue dot in the right panel of the video shows the position of the capillary wave. This video is associated with Figure 3 of the manuscript.

Download Sanjay et al. supplementary movie 4(Video)
Video 2.8 MB

Sanjay et al. supplementary movie 5

Angular trajectory of the travelling capillary wave during bursting bubble in a viscoplastic liquid medium: $\mathcal{J} = 0.2$ and $\mathcal{O}h = 10^{-2}$. The blue dot in the right panel of the video shows the position of the capillary wave. This video is associated with Figure 3 of the manuscript.

Download Sanjay et al. supplementary movie 5(Video)
Video 2.9 MB

Sanjay et al. supplementary movie 6

Angular trajectory of the travelling capillary wave during bursting bubble in a viscoplastic liquid medium: $\mathcal{J} = 1.0$ and $\mathcal{O}h = 10^{-2}$. The blue dot in the right panel of the video shows the position of the capillary wave. This video is associated with Figure 3 of the manuscript.

Download Sanjay et al. supplementary movie 6(Video)
Video 2.6 MB

Sanjay et al. supplementary movie 7

Formation of the jet as a result of collapsing cavity in a Newtonian liquid medium: $\mathcal{J} = 0.0$ and $\mathcal{O}h = 10^{-2}$. The blue dot in the right panel of the video shows the centre-line interface location being tracked. This video is associated with Figure 4 of the manuscript.

Download Sanjay et al. supplementary movie 7(Video)
Video 2.9 MB

Sanjay et al. supplementary movie 8

Effects of viscoplasticity on the formation of the jet as a result of collapsing cavity (jetting is suppressed): $\mathcal{J} = 0.3$ and $\mathcal{O}h = 10^{-2}$. The blue dot in the right panel of the video shows the centre-line interface location being tracked. This video is associated with Figure 4 of the manuscript.

Download Sanjay et al. supplementary movie 8(Video)
Video 2.2 MB

Sanjay et al. supplementary movie 9

Bursting bubble in a viscoplastic liquid medium: $\mathcal{J} = 0.1$ and $\mathcal{O}h = 10^{-3}$. The left part shows the magnitude of the velocity field, and the right part shows the magnitude of the Deformation tensor on a $\log_{10}$ scale. This video is associated with Figure 11 of the manuscript.

Download Sanjay et al. supplementary movie 9(Video)
Video 3.3 MB

Sanjay et al. supplementary movie 10

Bursting bubble in a viscoplastic liquid medium: $\mathcal{J} = 0.1$ and $\mathcal{O}h = 10^{-1}$. The left part shows the magnitude of the velocity field, and the right part shows the magnitude of the Deformation tensor on a $\log_{10}$ scale. This video is associated with Figure 11 of the manuscript.

Download Sanjay et al. supplementary movie 10(Video)
Video 3.4 MB
Supplementary material: PDF

Sanjay et al. supplementary material

Captions for movies 1-10
Download Sanjay et al. supplementary material(PDF)
PDF 82.4 KB