1. Introduction
Cavitation-bubble collapse and subsequent damage occur in confined geometries (e.g. in channels, pipes and other enclosed systems) in various hydraulic and engineering applications, including in therapeutic ultrasound procedures such as shock-wave lithotripsy, fuel injectors, thermal-hydraulic systems and the spallation neutron source (SNS). With regard to the latter, cavitation erosion is the lifetime-limiting factor for the target used in the SNS at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (Haines et al. Reference Haines, McManamy, Gabriel, Battle, Chipley, Crabtree, Jacobs, Lousteau, Rennich and Riemer2014; Riemer et al. Reference Riemer, McClintock, Kaminskas and Abdou2014) and in similar proton beam facilities (Futakawa et al. Reference Futakawa, Naoe, Kogawa, Haga and Okita2014; Naoe et al. Reference Naoe, Kogawa, Wakui, Haga, Teshigawara, Kinoshita, Takada and Futakawa2016, Reference Naoe, Wakui, Kinoshita, Kogawa, Haga, Harada, Takada and Futakawa2018). Moreover, the channel geometry mitigates cavitation in a mercury target for neutron production (McClintock et al. Reference McClintock, Riemer, Ferguson, Carroll and Dayton2012). Negative transient pressures vaporise the working liquid and small vapour bubbles grow rapidly and collapse near solid surfaces. During collapse, a cavitation bubble concentrates energy into the release of an outward-propagating shock wave capable of damaging surrounding solids (Rayleigh Reference Rayleigh1917; Hickling & Plesset Reference Hickling and Plesset1964; Benjamin & Ellis Reference Benjamin and Ellis1966). The collapse dynamics, pressures and temperatures experienced by neighbouring surfaces are of key interest to characterise the damage mechanisms and predict mass loss (Franc et al. Reference Franc, Riondet, Karimi and Chahine2012; Kim et al. Reference Kim, Chahine, Franc and Karimi2014).
Nearby surfaces break the spherical symmetry of a collapsing bubble. The non-spherical dynamics have been extensively examined (Kornfeld & Suvorov Reference Kornfeld and Suvorov1944; Lauterborn & Bolle Reference Lauterborn and Bolle1975; Blake & Gibson Reference Blake and Gibson1987; Vogel, Lauterborn & Timm Reference Vogel, Lauterborn and Timm1989). Compared with a spherical collapse, pressures produced on the nearby surface are attributed to the water-hammer shock wave emitted from the jet impinging upon the opposite side of the bubble, sometimes directly onto the solid surface (Naudé & Ellis Reference Naudé and Ellis1961; Plesset & Chapman Reference Plesset and Chapman1971; Tomita & Shima Reference Tomita and Shima1986). Scaling relationships for the re-entrant jet speeds and water-hammer shock pressures have been developed as functions of driving pressure and initial bubble stand-off distance from the neighbouring wall (Supponen et al. Reference Supponen, Obreschkow, Tinguely, Kobel, Dorsaz and Farhat2016, Reference Supponen, Obreschkow, Kobel, Tinguely, Dorsaz and Farhat2017).
Numerical simulation approaches, including the boundary element and boundary integral methods (Blake, Taib & Doherty Reference Blake, Taib and Doherty1986; Zhang, Duncan & Chahine Reference Zhang, Duncan and Chahine1993; Wang Reference Wang2014; Aganin et al. Reference Aganin, Ilgamov, Kosolapova and Malakhov2016; Brujan, Takahira & Ogasawara Reference Brujan, Takahira and Ogasawara2019), finite-volume approaches (Sagar & el Moctar Reference Sagar and el Moctar2020) and potential flow calculations (Plesset & Chapman Reference Plesset and Chapman1971; Molefe & Peters Reference Molefe and Peters2019), predict the behaviour of a single bubble collapsing near a wall, re-entrant jet speeds, as well as material pitting (Hsiao et al. Reference Hsiao, Jayaprakash, Kapahi, Choi and Chahine2014). However, these approaches assume an incompressible or weakly compressible liquid, such that they cannot capture shock–wall interactions pertinent to cavitation damage. Johnsen & Colonius (Reference Johnsen and Colonius2006), Beig & Johnsen (Reference Beig and Johnsen2015), Coralic & Colonius (Reference Coralic and Colonius2013), Schmidmayer, Bryngelson & Colonius (Reference Schmidmayer, Bryngelson and Colonius2020), Trummler et al. (Reference Trummler, Bryngelson, Schmidmayer, Schmidt, Colonius and Adams2020) and Trummler, Schmidt & Adams (Reference Trummler, Schmidt and Adams2021) conducted simulations of this problem with high-order accurate, shock- and interface-capturing approaches. The numerical simulations of Beig (Reference Beig2018) showed the differences between spherical bubble collapse and collapse near a wall. In the spherical case, the collapse concentrates the available potential energy into the bubble internal energy at minimum volume. The energy is released as a shock whose pressure amplitude decays as $1/r^{1.13}$ (Cole Reference Cole1948), where $r$ is a given radial distance from the collapse origin. In the case of collapse near a single wall, the pressure produced a given distance away is different from the spherical case, due to (i) a collapse at a different location from the bubble original location (attracted to wall by image bubble), (ii) energy release due to the water-hammer process, (iii) a resulting shock whose strength is greater in the direction of the shock (and weak in other directions along the front). Moreover, results from Beig (Reference Beig2018) showed agreement with experimental re-entrant jet speeds (Brujan et al. Reference Brujan, Keen, Vogel and Blake2002; Supponen et al. Reference Supponen, Obreschkow, Tinguely, Kobel, Dorsaz and Farhat2016), collapse morphology (Philipp & Lauterborn Reference Philipp and Lauterborn1998) and the maximum wall pressure scaling.
Bubble dynamics in a confined environment have been investigated in a variety of settings. Past studies examined nonlinear oscillations in spherically confining compliant materials (Vincent et al. Reference Vincent, Marmottant, Gonzalez-Avila, Ando and Ohl2014; Vincent & Marmottant Reference Vincent and Marmottant2017) or in a tube (O$\tilde{g}$uz & Prosperetti Reference Og̃uz and Prosperetti1998; Farhangmehr et al. Reference Farhangmehr, Hajizadeh Aghdam, Shervani-Tabar, Parvizi, Ohl and Khoo2014), which may lead to non-spherical behaviour. Dabir-Moghaddam & Wu (Reference Dabir-Moghaddam and Wu2016), using a finite-volume approach, simulated the inertial collapse of a single bubble in a cylinder and observed increased shock pressures from the bubble collapse on the cylindrical wall relative to a single flat wall configuration. Using laser-induced experiments and the boundary-element method, the single bubble collapse between two parallel plates with a vertical plate at the end (Brujan et al. Reference Brujan, Takahira and Ogasawara2019; Li et al. Reference Li, Zhang, Wang and Zhang2019) or near corner (Brujan et al. Reference Brujan, Noda, Ishigami, Ogasawara and Takahira2018), has been studied to determine the re-entrant jet angle dependence on the stand-off distances from the plate.
The problem of interest here involves a gas bubble collapsing between two parallel, rigid plates (walls). Gonzalez-Avila et al. (Reference Gonzalez-Avila, Klaseboer, Khoo and Ohl2011) studied the cavitation bubble growth and collapse dynamics of a bubble nucleated at one of the channel walls via experiments and a boundary-element method. In the study, the non-dimensional channel width, $\eta _o=W/R_o$, where $R_o$ is the maximum bubble radius and $W$ the channel height or width, was varied from $0.3$ to $7.3$. Here, we use the same definition for the non-dimensional channel width. For $\eta _o < 2$, the bubble is attached to at least one of the channel walls. The study showed $\eta _o$ affecting the dynamics, revealing three different collapse scenarios: collapse at the channel centre (neutral collapse); collapse onto the lower wall; and collapse onto upper wall. For large widths $\eta _o>7$, the far-plate no longer affects the collapse. Using the same configuration, Gonzalez-Avila et al. (Reference Gonzalez-Avila, van Blokland, Zeng and Ohl2019) studied the shear stress fields at the proximal plate and observed enhanced bubble centre migration. Similarly, Zeng, Gonzalez-Avila & Ohl (Reference Zeng, Gonzalez-Avila and Ohl2020) observed the same aforementioned three different jetting scenarios that strongly depend on $\eta _o$ and the stand-off distance from the proximal wall, $\gamma _o$. Our interests here are on detached bubble configurations, i.e. $\eta _{o}>2$, to determine the effect of the far channel wall by comparing with the single-wall configuration. The first studies of this configuration are those of Chahine (Reference Chahine1982) and Kuvshinov et al. (Reference Kuvshinov, Prokhorenko, Dezhkunov and Kuvshinov1982). In particular, Chahine & Morine (Reference Chahine and Morine1980) observed re-entrant jets forming in the wall-parallel direction through the channel centre for $\eta _o \approx 20/9$. Ishida et al. (Reference Ishida, Nuntadusit, Kimoto, Nakagawa and Yamamoto2001) and Hsiao et al. (Reference Hsiao2013) qualitatively studied this collapse morphology for $\eta _{o}>2$ configurations using a boundary-element method. Similarly, Farhangmehr et al. (Reference Farhangmehr, Hajizadeh Aghdam, Shervani-Tabar, Parvizi, Ohl and Khoo2014) observed the re-entrant jet direction change for $\eta _o \approx 3$ for a bubble collapsing in a cylinder. Using boundary-element and potential flow methods, Kucera & Blake (Reference Kucera and Blake1990) also observed the wall-parallel jets in a channel and cylinder; however, they noted that these methods may not yield realistic bubble shapes under high confinement. Thus, to accurately capture both the bubble collapse and shock pressures, high-order accurate numerical approaches representing the full compressible dynamics are required.
The objective of this work is to determine the role of confinement on the dynamics and wall impact loads of a single bubble inertially collapsing in a channel via numerical simulation. In addition to the driving pressure and initial stand-off distance in the case of a bubble collapsing near a single wall, we show that the relative size of the bubble to the channel width affects the bubble dynamics (volume and location at collapse, jet speed), and therefore the wall pressure, in the case of collapse between two parallel walls. Though the wall pressures are lower than in the corresponding collapse near a single wall, significant pressures can be produced along the far wall. The paper outline is as follows. The problem set-up, governing equations for binary water-gas compressible, multiphase flows, and numerical solver of Beig, Aboulhasanzadeh & Johnsen (Reference Beig, Aboulhasanzadeh and Johnsen2018) are presented in § 2. In § 3, the bubble dynamics and maximum wall pressures are compared between the channel and single-wall configurations for baseline parameters. We find the approximate channel width and driving pressure where the dynamics approach single-wall values. We then investigate the bubble dynamics and maximum wall pressures dependence on the channel width, initial bubble stand-off distance and driving pressure. Additionally, we discuss the special case of a channel-centred bubble at various confinement and driving pressures. We summarise our findings in § 4.
2. Problem set-up and governing equations
As illustrated in figure 1, our geometry consists of two flat, rigid, infinitely long parallel plates (distal and proximal), a width $W$ from each other. An initially spherical bubble of radius $R_o$ is placed a distance $x_o$ from the proximal plate. As a reference, we take $R_o=500~\mathrm {\mu }{\rm m}$. Liquid water of pressure $p_{\infty }$ and temperature $T_{\infty }$ surrounds the bubble. Water vapour in the bubble is modelled as a non-condensable ideal gas with initial pressure $p_{o}=3550$ Pa and temperature $T_o = {300}~{\rm K}$; the collapse is initiated due to the resulting pressure difference across the bubble interface. Due to the symmetry in the $xz$- and $xy$-plane (i.e. front and bottom planes in figure 1, respectively), a quarter of the domain is simulated with symmetric boundary conditions. The top and back planes have non-reflecting boundary conditions (Thompson Reference Thompson1990). Distal and proximal channel walls are rigid, perfectly reflecting, no-slip boundary conditions; simulations of collapse near a single wall are conducted by prescribing non-reflecting conditions in the place of the distal wall. The computational domain has dimensions $W\times 4R_o\times 4R_o$. A resolution of $192$ computational cells per initial bubble radius and grid spacing is fixed for each simulation (i.e. the number of computational points changes with channel width). The dimensions and resolution were determined such that the boundary reflections do not affect the bubble dynamics based on results of Beig et al. (Reference Beig, Aboulhasanzadeh and Johnsen2018).
Three non-dimensional parameters are considered in this problem: (i) the channel width $\eta _o$; (ii) the initial, bubble centroid stand-off distance with respect to the proximal wall $\gamma _o = x_{o}/R_o$; and (iii) the driving pressure ratio $p_\infty /p_{{atm}}$ (where $p_{{atm}}$ is the atmospheric pressure). At collapse (i.e. at minimum volume), the bubble centroid $x$-location, $x_c$ and the non-dimensional bubble collapse location is $\gamma _c = x_c/R_o$. We consider the case $\eta _o = 4$, $\gamma _{o} = 5/4$ and $p_\infty = {5}~{\rm MPa}$, as a baseline case. To understand the role of confinement, we conduct a sequence of simulations varying one of the baseline parameters per sequence. Table 1 tabulates the initial conditions for the simulations. We consider three different driving pressures ($p_\infty = {2}$, ${5}$ and 10 MPa), motivated by the cavitation studies of Franc et al. (Reference Franc, Riondet, Karimi and Chahine2011) identifying these pressures relevant for cavitation erosion applications. Additionally, we consider seven channel-centred (i.e. $\eta _o = 2\gamma _o$) bubble simulations for each of the driving pressure ratios. For the single-wall simulations, we consider 24 total initial stand-off distances. Time is non-dimensionalised using the Rayleigh collapse time for a bubble in a free field, $t_c = 0.915 R_o \sqrt {\rho _{\ell } / \Delta p}$, where $\rho _{\ell }$ is the liquid density and $\Delta p = p_{\infty }-p_o$. Velocities and pressures (including ambient and vapour pressures) are non-dimensionalised using the characteristic re-entrant jet speed, $\sqrt {\Delta p/\rho _{\ell }}$, and water-hammer pressure, $\rho _{\ell }a_{\ell }\sqrt {\Delta p/\rho _{\ell }}$, respectively (Plesset & Chapman Reference Plesset and Chapman1971), where $a_{\ell }$ is the liquid speed of sound.
The governing equations are mass conservation, momentum and energy balance,
where $\rho$ is the total (mixture) density, $u_i$ the velocity vector, $\tau _{ij}$ the shear stress tensor, $Q_k$ the heat flux, $\alpha ^{(k)}$ is the volume fraction of material $k$, $K$ is the total number of materials (here, $K = 2$) and indices $i,j = 1, 2$ and 3, where repeated indices denote summation. The total energy (per unit volume) $E$ comprises of internal and kinetic contributions, $E = \rho e + \frac {1}{2} \rho u_k^2$. Material $k$ has volume fraction $\alpha ^{(k)}$ and density $\rho ^{(k)}$ the following relations, with $\sum _k \rho ^{(k)} \alpha ^{(k)} = \rho$ and $\sum _k \alpha ^{(k)} = 1$. Thus, $K-1$ mass balance equations, corresponding to the $K$ materials, must be evolved. The internal energy per unit volume is related to the relevant thermodynamic quantities through the Noble–Abel Stiffened gas equation of state of Le Métayer & Saurel (Reference Le Métayer and Saurel2016),
where $T$ is the temperature and $q$, $n$, $B$, $b$ and $c$ are material properties prescribed to produce the correct propagation speeds in liquids and solids (Harlow & Amsden Reference Harlow and Amsden1971; Le Métayer, Massoni & Saurel Reference Le Métayer, Massoni and Saurel2005; Le Métayer & Saurel Reference Le Métayer and Saurel2016). The speed of sound for a substance described by this equation of state is defined as
Table 2 lists the phenomenological constants for the water phases used in this work. For multiple materials, the calculation of $\rho e$ is performed to prevent spurious interfacial errors (Beig & Johnsen Reference Beig and Johnsen2015).
We include heat diffusion and viscous effects. Fourier conduction describes the heat diffusion process with $Q_k = - \kappa \partial T/\partial x_k$, where $\kappa$ is the thermal conductivity. Fluids behave in a Newtonian fashion, such that the viscous stress is given by $\tau _{ij} = \mu _b \dot {\epsilon }_{kk}\delta _{ij} + \mu _s \dot {\epsilon }_{ij}^{(d)}$, where $\mu _b$ is the bulk viscosity, $\mu _s$ the shear viscosity. $\dot {\epsilon }_{ij} = \frac {1}{2}(\partial u_{i}/\partial x_{j} + \partial u_{j}/\partial x_{i})$, $\dot {\epsilon }_{ij}^{(d)} = \dot {\epsilon }_{ij} - \frac {1}{3}\dot {\epsilon }_{kk}\delta _{ij}$, is the strain-rate tensor and its deviatoric part, respectively. Since our emphasis is on inertial collapse, surface tension and mass transfer are neglected (Beig Reference Beig2018). Theoretical simulations using Rayleigh–Plesset-type models, Storey & Szeri (Reference Storey and Szeri2000) and Preston (Reference Preston2004) suggest that the phase change does not significantly change the inertial collapse dynamics and is also omitted in this study. For water vapour, $\kappa = 0.02\ {\rm W}\ ({\rm m}\ {\rm K})^{-1}$ and $\mu _b = \mu _s = 10^{-5}\ {\rm Pa}\ {\rm s}$; for liquid water, $\kappa = \ {\rm W}\ ({\rm m}\ {\rm K})^{-1}$ and $\mu _b = \mu _s = 9\times 10^{-4}\ {\rm Pa}\ {\rm s}$. The viscosity and thermal conductivity of the materials are temperature independent in these simulations. The mixture material properties $\phi$ (e.g. viscosities, thermal conductivities) are weighted by the volume fraction, $\phi = \sum _k \alpha ^{(k)} \phi ^{(k)}$.
The five-equations multiphase model is used to represent gas/liquid flows (Kapila et al. Reference Kapila, Menikoff, Bdzil, Son and Stewart2001; Allaire, Clerc & Kokh Reference Allaire, Clerc and Kokh2002; Murrone & Guillard Reference Murrone and Guillard2005; Beig & Johnsen Reference Beig and Johnsen2015). An additional species conservation equation is solved in non-conservative form to maintain interfacial equilibrium conditions for velocity, pressure and temperature (Beig & Johnsen Reference Beig and Johnsen2015), i.e.
where $\alpha ^{(k')} = 1 - \alpha ^{(k)}$ and $k'$ and $k$ represent the distinct phases and $a$ the speed of sound, $a^2 = {n(p+B)}/{\rho (1-\rho b)}$. For mixture relation for the sound speed, the Wood speed of sound (Wood & Lindsay Reference Wood and Lindsay1956) is used to calculate the proximal side term in (2.4) and approximate the Riemann solver wave speeds.
The numerical approach of Beig & Johnsen (Reference Beig and Johnsen2015) is used to solve the governing equations. The third-order accurate total variation diminishing Runge–Kutta scheme of Gottlieb & Shu (Reference Gottlieb and Shu1998) is used for time marching with an adaptive time step calculated based on the appropriate advective and diffusion numerical constraints. The convective fluxes are computed in divergence form using a conservative, solution-adaptive approach based on the discontinuity sensor/criterion of Henry de Frahan, Varadan & Johnsen (Reference Henry de Frahan, Varadan and Johnsen2015) to discriminate between smooth regions and discontinuities. For smooth regions, standard fourth-order explicit central differences are applied. At discontinuities, the HLL (Harten–Lax–van Leer) Riemann solver (Harten, Lax & van Leer Reference Harten, Lax and van Leer1983) is used, with proper correction for equations in non-conservative form, detailed by Saurel & Abgrall (Reference Saurel and Abgrall1999), in conjunction with the high-order accurate primitive variable WENO (weighted essentially non-oscillatory) reconstruction scheme of Johnsen & Colonius (Reference Johnsen and Colonius2006). The first and second derivatives of the diffusion and source terms are computed using explicit fourth-order central differences. The non-zero derivatives of materials properties (i.e. viscosity, thermal conductivity) in mixture regions are calculated using explicit fourth-order accurate central differences.
3. Results and discussion
3.1. Single-wall and channel comparison
We compare the qualitative behaviour of bubble collapse in a channel in relation with collapse near a single wall, figure 2 shows contours of pressure (top) and numerical schlieren (bottom) along the centre $xz$-plane for a bubble collapsing near a single wall (distal) and in a channel of width $\eta _o = 4$ (proximal), with $\gamma _{o} = 5/4$ (baseline). Given the initial conditions, a rarefaction propagates radially outward (figure 2a1 and figure 2b1). The rarefaction waves from the initial uniform pressure field can affect the bubble collapse dynamics but such effect was not observed, and the surrounding liquid pressure dominates the collapse. The bubble starts to collapse, as shown by the convergence of the flow (figure 2b2). The collapse progression for the channel is similar to the single-wall configuration. However, it takes place at a slower rate due to the rarefaction reflecting off the other channel wall back to the bubble; as a result, the local pressure driving the collapse is reduced by the flow induced by the image bubble. During the collapse and due to the proximity to the proximal wall, a re-entrant jet forms along the distal side of the bubble, directed towards the proximal wall (figure 2a2 and figure 2b3). The jet further penetrates the bubble during collapse and eventually impinges upon the proximal side. Aside from slower collapse rate, the bubble shapes during impingement between the two configurations are qualitatively similar. Upon impingement, an outward-propagating water-hammer shock is emitted and propagates towards the proximal side (figure 2a3 and figure 2b4). Four shock fronts are observed. From left to right, the first shock is the merger of two shocks: re-entrant jet impingement and minimum bubble volume implosion (Beig Reference Beig2018). These shocks merge into one shock that impinges upon the neighbouring wall. The second is due to the first shock collapsing the vortex ring remnant (frame not shown). The third and fourth shocks are reflections of the first and second from the proximal wall. Comparing the pressure contours between figure 2(a3) and figure 2(b4), the bubble in the channel configuration produces a weaker shock into the surroundings. After these collapse events, the bubble forms into vortex ring convecting towards the proximal wall, as seen by Benjamin & Ellis (Reference Benjamin and Ellis1966), Tomita & Shima (Reference Tomita and Shima1986) and Beig et al. (Reference Beig, Aboulhasanzadeh and Johnsen2018) (see figure 2a4).
To better quantify the energy release upon collapse, figure 3 shows the time history of the bubble volume, migration distance $\Delta x/R_o=\gamma _o-\gamma _c$, and re-entrant jet speed. The three quantities reveal the primary effects of the far channel wall as it slows down the bubble collapse rate in the channel compared with the single-wall configuration. The dynamics are identical until $t/t_c = 0.17$, when the reflected rarefaction impinges upon the bubble in the channel; on this scale, the discrepancy between the channel and single-wall results, due to the impingement of the rarefaction reflected off the second wall, is visible only from $t/t_c \approx 0.4$. Table 3 shows the minimum bubble volume and migration distance at collapse for the channel and single-wall configurations. The larger minimum bubble volume in the channel (compared with the single-wall configuration) yields a weaker water-hammer shock in the liquid. Similarly, the lower migration distance means a larger travel distance for the shock to reach the proximal channel wall and, therefore, weaker (lower) maximum wall pressure relative to the single-wall configuration. The maximum re-entrant jet speeds are $\max (u_{{jet}})/\sqrt {(\Delta p/\rho _{\ell })} = 14.1$ for both configurations.
Figure 4 shows the time history of the non-dimensional pressure at the centreline $x = x_o - W$ (location of the distal wall for the channel or left-hand boundary for single-wall configuration) and $+x_o$ (proximal wall) versus time. As the initial rarefaction reflects off the proximal wall and bubble, the pressure along the proximal wall decreases to reach a minimum $O(10^{-5})$; a similar value is achieved as the initial rarefaction reflects off the far wall of the channel. The pressure then slowly increases until the collapse, at which point the shock thereby produced caused an instantaneous pressure increase, first along the proximal wall since it is closer, then along the far wall (or equivalent location for collapse near a single wall). Additional pressure peaks correspond to the vortex ring collapse shock and reflections. As suggested by the dynamics in figure 3, the shock emission is delayed in the channel compared with the single-wall configuration, again due to the second reflected rarefaction. Given the closer collapse location to the proximal wall (relative to the channel configuration, see table 3) and comparable jet speed, the maximum pressure peaks has a larger magnitude when the collapse takes place near a single wall. Along the far wall (or equivalent location in the case of collapse near a single wall) pressure peaks can be distinguished, though at a smaller magnitude due to the smaller pressure amplitude in the direction opposite to the jet and longer distance travelled (Beig Reference Beig2018). It may seem counter-intuitive that the pressure is higher for the channel far-wall than the single-wall configuration equivalent location. However, there is pressure doubling from the shock impinging on and reflecting from the channel far-wall. In the single-wall configuration, the pressure jump peaks are due to the bubble water-hammer and collapse shock. Considering half the channel wall far-wall maximum pressure (i.e. the maximum pressure in the liquid prior to the shock-wall impingement), the pressure is approximately $12\,\%$ less than the maximum wall pressure in the single-wall configuration. This difference is expected due to the larger minimum volume (less intense) at collapse in the channel compared with the single-wall configuration.
3.2. Dependence on the channel width
We compare results from simulations with different channel widths $\eta _o$ to determine the influence of the confinement on the bubble collapse. The driving pressure and initial bubble stand-off distance are fixed to $p_{\infty }=5\ {\rm MPa}$ and $\gamma _{o} = 5/4$, respectively. To quantitatively describe the dependence of the collapse on confinement, figure 5 shows the minimum bubble volume at collapse, bubble distance from the wall at collapse and maximum re-entrant jet speed, and figure 6 shows the maximum pressure along the proximal wall for different channel widths. At the larger channel widths (i.e. widths for which the second reflected rarefaction impinges upon the bubble after collapse), these quantities tend to those corresponding to collapse near a single wall at the same initial stand-off distance. For shortest channel width ($\eta _o=3$), the jet speed is almost twice as high as that corresponding to collapse near a single wall. However, given the $r^{-1.13}$ decay, the larger distance at collapse ($\gamma _c \approx 0.8$ versus $0.7$), along with the slightly larger minimum volume, still yields a lower maximum wall pressures compared with collapse near a single wall.
We can readily determine the smallest channel width for which the collapse properties are affected by confinement. The total time for the wave to reach the distal wall, reflect and return to the bubble interface is $t_{r}=(2d+\Delta x(t_{r},\Delta p, \gamma _{o}))/{a_{\ell }}$, where $d=W-(x_o+R_o)$ and is the wave travel distance. To simplify the calculation, we assume the wave is travelling at a constant speed and the speed of sound. The wave travel time ($t_r$) must be less than the single-wall bubble collapse time ($t_{sc})$, i.e. $t_{r}/t_{sc} < 1$; otherwise, the wave does not return in time to affect the collapse dynamics. The single-wall bubble collapse time is greater than the Rayleigh collapse time such that $t_{sc} = f t_{c}$ with factor $f>1$. Rearranging the expression for the $t_{r}/t_{sc}$ ratio, we obtain the inequality for the channel width at which it no longer affects a bubble collapse,
For $p_{\infty }=5\ {\rm MPa}$ and $\gamma _{o}=5/4$, $f = 1.24$ (see figure 3), $t_c = 6.7~{\mathrm {\mu }}{\rm s}$ and $\Delta x \approx 0.5R_o$ (see figure 3 and table 3). Thus, for the baseline case of parameters, the channel width must be $\eta _{o} \gtrsim 9.4$ (or $W \gtrsim 9.4R_o$) to no longer affect the bubble collapse. For an attached bubble (e.g. $\gamma _o = -1$), (3.1) yields the $\eta _o>7$ observation of Gonzalez-Avila et al. (Reference Gonzalez-Avila, Klaseboer, Khoo and Ohl2011).
3.3. Initial stand-off distance dependence
To better understand the role of the second wall, we examine simulations with different initial stand-off distances $\gamma _o$ while holding the channel width fixed at $\eta _o = 4$. To quantify the intensity of the collapse, figure 7 shows the minimum bubble volume, maximum re-entrant jet speed, migration distance and collapse location for different initial bubble stand-off locations. The smallest minimum volume is achieved under symmetric collapse, i.e. $\gamma _{o}=\gamma _{c}=2$. This is attributed to the increased inertia from the two impinging jets (discussed in § 3.1) compressing the bubble into a smaller volume compared with the single jet cases. Moreover, the collapse volume for the channel is comparable to the single-wall $\gamma _{o} = 5$ case for which the collapse is near spherical. For $\gamma _{o}<3/2$ the collapse is affected early enough by the rarefactions reflected by both walls, which reduce the driving pressure and thus the intensity of the collapse.
Over the course of its collapse, the bubble is attracted to various degrees by the image sinks representing the walls, and therefore migrate. For this channel width, bubbles initially close to the wall migrate significantly towards the wall, by an amount similar to their single-wall counterparts. For $\gamma _o \gtrsim 3/2$, the influence of the far wall is greater, resulting in less migration towards the wall than in collapse near a wall. A consequence is that bubbles at the largest initial stand-off distances have collapse locations farther from the wall than the corresponding collapse near a single wall. In other words, the shock is emitted at a farther distance from the proximal wall in the presence of a second wall. With smaller volumes, higher local velocities (including jet speeds) are achieved for $\gamma _o \gtrsim 3/2$ (see figure 7). Thus, a stronger water-hammer shock is emitted into the liquid in these cases.
Figure 8 shows the maximum pressure, $p_{mx}$, along the proximal channel wall from the water-hammer shock versus the location of the bubble collapse since this location – rather than the initial stand-off distance – is representative of the spatial origin of the emitted shock. We note that the same $\gamma _o$ for the single-wall and channel cases were considered. However, due to the different dynamics produced by different levels of confinement, the bubble collapse locations $\gamma _c$ are different between the two configurations. The maximum wall pressure is highest for those bubbles collapsing nearest to the wall, and decreases as the collapse distance from the wall (and thus initial stand-off distance, see figure 7c,d) is increased, following an $r^{-1.13}$ scaling consistent with underwater explosions (Cole Reference Cole1948) and bubble collapse near a single wall (Beig Reference Beig2018). Consistent with the observations about the minimum volume and jet speed, the increased effect of the second wall, i.e. its proximity, gives rise to a lower maximum wall pressure along the proximal wall compared with a bubble collapsing near a single wall: as $\gamma _o \rightarrow 1$, the bubble collapses close to the proximal wall and the jet speeds are comparable to their single-wall counterparts; however, emitted shocks are weaker, and thus the maximum wall pressures are lower, due to the larger minimum bubble volume at collapse. At larger stand-off distances, though the jet speed (and thus the strength of the emitted shock) is higher and minimum volume smaller, the collapse occurs at a distance farther from the proximal wall in bubble collapse in a channel; the $r^{-1.13}$ decay of the shock amplitude thus gives rise to a lower wall pressure. We also note that the bubbles closer to channel centre produce higher pressures along the far (distal) wall due to being closer to the wall upon collapse.
3.4. Driving pressure ratio dependence
We examine how the driving pressure ratio affects the bubble dynamics. The channel width is fixed to $\eta _o = 4$ and the initial bubble stand-off distance is varied. Figure 9 shows the bubble collapse volume, maximum re-entrant jet speed, migration distance and collapse location for different initial bubble stand-off distances, three driving pressures and channel and single-wall configurations. The minimum volume and migration distance data for each respective configuration (single-wall versus channel) follow a similar behaviour as discussed in § 3.3. For the collapse in a channel, the higher driving pressures give rise to smaller minimum volume for bubbles initially near the middle of the channel, and larger minimum volumes for bubbles closer to the proximal wall. For $\gamma _o \gtrsim 3/2$, the migration is small because the bubble location is closer to the middle of the channel, such that the effect of the far wall becomes comparable to that of the proximal wall, thus leading to a more symmetric (about the centreplane parallel to the walls) collapse. The re-entrant jets follow inverse trends and still obey the water-hammer scaling.
The maximum wall pressure along the distal and proximal wall versus collapse location for the three driving pressures is shown in figure 10. Trends similar to the $p_{\infty }=5\ {\rm MPa}$ case in § 3.3 are observed. Both distal and proximal maximum wall pressures follow the black solid curve for underwater explosion shock decay (Cole Reference Cole1948). The maximum wall pressures along the proximal wall are lower in the channel configuration than in collapse near a single wall for the same initial stand-off distance. For a sufficiently large initial stand-off distance, this maximum pressure is appropriately scaled by the water-hammer speed/pressure (see distal wall maximum pressures). In summary, increasing the driving pressure while keeping the other parameters fixed both speeds up the collapse and produces a more intense collapse as evidenced by the higher jet speed and smaller minimum volume, thus leading to higher proximal wall pressures. Additionally, there is a larger range of stand-off distances for which bubbles are not affected by the second wall since the collapse time is faster.
3.5. Symmetric domain configuration
We examine the configuration of a channel-centred bubble as the channel width is varied. The aim is to determine the channel width at which the collapse dynamics change and quantify the corresponding maximum wall pressures. The channel width, initial bubble stand-off distance and collapse location are related such that $\gamma _{o} = \gamma _c = \eta _o/2$. Figure 11 shows the non-dimensional pressure and numerical schlieren contours for $\eta _o = 9/4$ (figure 11a1–a3), $3$ (figure 11b1–b3) and $7/2$ (figure 11c1–c3). For $\eta _o = 9/4$, the proximity of the bubble walls to the channel walls prevents wall-normal (horizontal) re-entrant jet formation due the attraction from the image bubbles (see figure 11a1). That is, the channel wall boundary conditions inhibit the liquid surroundings to fill the previously occupied space by the gas bubble as the bubble collapses in the horizontal direction. The bubble continues to collapse with re-entrant jets forming in the wall-parallel (vertical) direction (figure 11a2) as observed by Chahine (Reference Chahine1982) and Kucera & Blake (Reference Kucera and Blake1990). The re-entrant jets impinge on each other yielding a water-hammer shock (figure 11a3). Vortex rings form and stretch horizontally, collapse due to the incident water-hammer shock, and emit water-hammer shocks of their own closer to the walls relative the bubble initial location. At the critical channel width $\eta _o \approx 3$, the vertical and horizontal sides of the bubble collapse at a similar rate (figure 11b2). However, the collapse is not spherical, and the bubble forms wall-normal at collapse, converging re-entrant jets. The jets impinge at the channel centre and horizontal vortex rings are not observed. A different collapse morphology takes place for $\eta _o = 7/2$. The jet direction goes from wall-parallel to wall-normal. Angled jets are not observed for intermediate channel widths. The surrounding liquid fills the space in the horizontal direction as the bubble collapses (see figure 11b2). Two horizontal jets form and impinge on each other at the channel centre yielding the outward-propagating shock (figure 11b2). The vortex ring's normal direction is horizontal and stretches in the vertical direction. After the collapse, the resulting shocks travel across the channel, reflect from the walls towards the ring (figure 11b3).
Figure 12 shows the non-dimensional minimum bubble volume as a function of initial stand-off distance (and channel width since $\gamma _o = \eta _o/2$). As the stand-off distance increases, the liquid surroundings fill the space as the bubble collapses towards the centroid. Then, converging horizontal jets compress the gas to a volume smaller than the single-wall cases for the same $\gamma _{o}$. However, as seen before, the larger distance from the channel walls reduces the maximum wall pressures.
The maximum wall pressure for the channel-centred bubble versus collapse location are shown in figure 13 (alongside the single-wall values). If we consider $\gamma _c = \gamma _o$ for these configurations, the critical channel width for horizontal-to-vertical jetting is observed at $\eta _o \approx 3$. The critical channel width is comparable to that observed by Chahine (Reference Chahine1982) of $\eta _o\approx 20/9$. Despite the limitation of the weakly compressible assumption, boundary-element methods may be able to accurately quantify the transition $\eta _o$ in the absence of the compressible flow dynamics (Hsiao et al. Reference Hsiao2013). For $\eta _o \leqslant 5/2$, the wall-parallel re-entrant jets strengthen the collapse of the resulting vortex ring. The proximity of the vortex-ring remnants to the walls yields higher maximum wall pressures than the single-wall cases if $\gamma _o = \gamma _c$. Instead, we consider the bubble remnant collapse location (see figure 11a3) in figure 13. We note that for $\eta _o \leqslant 5/2$, the vortex ring remnant collapse location is $\gamma _c\approx 4(\gamma _o-1)$. The non-dimensional maximum wall pressure amplitude decay of $1/r^{1.13}$ is retained with these collapse locations. For $\eta _o > 5/2$, the maximum channel wall pressures follow the pressure scaling with $\gamma _c = \gamma _o$.
4. Conclusions
Numerical simulations were conducted to understand the role of confinement on the dynamics and pressures generated by a single inertially collapsing bubble between rigid, parallel walls (channel). As the bubble collapses, rarefaction waves propagate radially outward, reflect off both walls (typically at separate times depending on the bubble location and channel size), and interact with the bubble again. A re-entrant jet directed towards the proximal wall forms, impinges upon the opposite side of the bubble, and generates a water-hammer shock that impinges upon the proximal wall. The presence of the second wall changes the pressure field during collapse compared with the corresponding collapse near a single wall; in particular, the pressure on the distal side of the bubble (farthest from the proximal wall) is reduced, thus generally reducing the intensity of the collapse (larger minimum volume and farther distance to the wall at collapse). For a fixed initial stand-off distance, as the channel width increases, i.e. $\eta _o\rightarrow \infty$, the bubble volume, migration distance and re-entrant jet speed approach their single-wall counterparts. The maximum wall pressure, however, monotonically approached a value below observed in the single-wall case due to the modified the pressure field in the channel.
Varying stand-off distance reduced the maximum wall pressures in the channel relative to the single wall. For $\gamma _o\lesssim 3/2$, the collapse was less intense due to the proximity to the wall (attraction to image bubble). For $\gamma _o\gtrsim 3/2$, the collapse was intensified (i.e. smaller minimum volume and higher re-entrant jet speed); however, the bubble collapses farther away from the channel walls such that the water-hammer shock pressure decayed below the single-wall value. The stand-off distance observations are consistent for three different driving pressures. Two different jetting behaviours are seen for a channel-centred bubble collapse. Horizontal re-entrant jets form for channel widths greater than the critical channel width $\eta _{o}\approx 3$. For $\eta _o\leqslant 5/2$, wall-parallel (vertical) re-entrant jets impinged at the bubble centroid strengthening the remnant vortex ring's collapse due to the channel walls sufficiently restricting the bubble's horizontal motion (image bubbles) such that the vertical direction collapse dominates the flow morphology. By accounting for bubble remnant collapse location, the maximum pressure decay of $1/r^{1.13}$ was observed. Future studies will consider the inertial collapse of wall-attached bubbles to compare with the results of Hsiao et al. (Reference Hsiao, Jayaprakash, Kapahi, Choi and Chahine2014) and Zeng et al. (Reference Zeng, Gonzalez-Avila and Ohl2020).
Supplementary material and movies
Supplementary material and movies are available at https://doi.org/10.1017/jfm.2022.571.
Acknowledgements
The work used resources of the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility, which is a DOE Office of Science User Facility supported under Contract DE-AC05-00OR22725. Additional resources were used by the Blue Waters sustained-petascale computing project, which is supported by the National Science Foundation (awards OCI-0725070 and ACI-1238993) the State of Illinois, and as of December, 2019, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency. Blue Waters is a joint effort of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and its National Center for Supercomputing Applications.
Funding
This research was supported in part by ONR grant N00014-18-1-2699 under Dr K.-H. Kim. This material is based in part upon work supported by the US Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences under contract number DE-AC05-00OR22725. This research was performed using funding received from the DOE Office of Nuclear Energy's Nuclear Energy University Programs (grant number DE-NE0008747).
Declaration of interests
The authors report no conflict of interest.