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Effect of a polymeric compound layer on jetting dynamics produced by bursting bubbles

Ocean Science Journal 2025 2 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Sainath A. Barbhai, Zhengyu Yang, Jie Feng

Summary

This study examines how polymer compound layers influence jetting dynamics in fluid systems. The presence of these layers alters the behavior of fluid jets, affecting breakup patterns and flow characteristics. Understanding these effects is relevant for industrial processes involving polymer-laden fluids and microplastic particle generation.

Polymers

Jetting dynamics from bursting bubbles play a key role in mediating mass and momentum transport across the air-liquid interface, and have attracted widespread interest from researchers across disciplines. In marine environments, this phenomenon has drawn considerable attention due to its role in releasing biochemical contaminants, such as extracellular polymeric substances, into the atmosphere through aerosol production. These biocontaminants often exhibit non-Newtonian characteristics, yet the physics of bubble bursting with a rheologically complex layer at the bubble-liquid interface remains largely unexplored. In this study, we experimentally investigate the jetting dynamics of bubble bursting events in the presence of such a polymeric compound layer. Using bubbles coated by a polyethylene oxide solution, we document the cavity collapse and jetting dynamics produced by bubble bursting. At a fixed polymer concentration, the jet velocity increases while the jet radius decreases with an increasing compound layer volume fraction, as a result of stronger capillary wave damping due to capillary wave separation at the compound interface as well as the formation of smaller cavity cone angles during bubble cavity collapse. These dynamics produce smaller and more numerous jet drops. Meanwhile, as the polymer concentration increases, the jet velocity decreases while the jet radius increases for the same compound layer fraction due to the increasing viscoelastic stresses. In addition, fewer jet drops are ejected as the jets become slower and broader with increasing polymer concentration, as viscoelastic stresses persist throughout the jet formation and thinning process. We further obtain, for the first time, a regime map delineating the conditions for jet drop ejection versus no jet drop ejection in bursting bubbles coated with a polymeric compound layer. Our results may provide new insights into the mechanisms of mass transport of organic materials in bubble-mediated aerosolization processes, advancing our understanding of marine biology and environmental science.

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