Research

All Wound Up

A thin fiber sitting atop a bubble can spontaneously coil around the bubble thanks to elastocapillarity. (This seemingly bizarre behavior is also why wet strands of hair clump together.) Here’s the situation: The dark circle you see is all bubble; only a portion of the bubble — known as a spherical cap — sticks above the surface of the liquid. When a fiber sits across the top of the bubble, two things can happen: 1) the fiber simply sits there until the bubble bursts, or 2) the fiber starts to bend and wind around the bubble’s cap.

Bending the fiber takes energy. In this case, that bending energy comes from the system as a whole reducing its free energy. The fiber actually sinks into the bubble film in what the researchers call a “bridged” configuration, where the fiber sits inside the liquid film while also touching the air inside and outside the bubble. In this position, the interfacial energy of the fiber-bubble system is lower, leaving enough excess energy savings for the fiber to coil. (Image and research credit: A. Fortais et al.)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.