Tag: droplet ejection

  • The Dance of the Droplets

    The Dance of the Droplets

    Milk and juice vibrating on a speaker can put on a veritable fireworks display of fluid dynamics. Vibrating a fluid can cause small standing waves, called Faraday waves, on the surface of the fluid. Add more energy and the instabilities grow nonlinearly, quickly leading to tiny ligaments and jets of liquid shooting upward. With sufficiently high energy, the jets shoot beyond the point where surface tension can hold the liquid together, resulting in a spray of droplets. (Image credit: vurt runner, source video; h/t to @jchawner)

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    How Rain Gets Its Smell

    Light rain after a dry spell often produces a distinctive earthy scent called petrichor that is associated with plant oils and bacteria products. How these chemicals get into the air has been unclear, but new research suggests that the mechanism may come from the rain itself. When water falls on a porous surface like soil, tiny air bubbles get trapped beneath the drop. These bubbles rise rapidly due to buoyancy and, upon reaching the surface, burst and release tiny droplets known as aerosols. Depending on the surface properties and the drop’s impact speed, a single drop can produce a cloud of aerosol droplets. The research team is now investigating how readily bacteria or pathogens in the soil can spread through this mechanism. Other human-focused research has already shown that these tiny aerosol droplets can persist in the air for remarkably long periods and may help spread diseases. (Video credit: Massachusetts Institute of Technology; research credit: Y. Joung and C. Buie; submitted by Daniel B and entropy-perturbation)

  • Beverage Bubbles Bursting

    Beverage Bubbles Bursting

    Fizzy drinks like soda and champagne have many bubbles which rise to the surface before bursting. When the film separating the bubble and the air drains and bursts, it leaves a millimeter-sized cavity that collapses on itself. That collapse creates an upward jet of fluid which can break into tiny aerosol droplets that disperse the aroma and flavor of the drink. Similar bubble-bursting events occur in sea spray and industrial applications, too. Researchers find that droplet ejection depends on bubble geometry and fluid properties such as viscosity. More viscous liquids, for example, generate smaller and faster droplets. Learn more and see videos of bubble-bursts at Newswise. (Image credit: E. Ghabache et al.)

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    The March of Drops

    I love science with a sense of humor. This video features a series of clips showing the behavior of droplets on what appears to be a superhydrophobic surface. In particular, there are some excellent examples of drops bouncing on an incline and droplets rebounding after impact. For droplets with enough momentum, impact flattens them like a pancake, with the rim sometimes forming a halo of droplets. If the momentum is high enough, these droplets can escape as satellite drops, but other times the rebound of the drop off the superhydrophobic surface is forceful enough to overcome the instability and draw the entire drop back off the surface.  (Video credit: C. Antonini et al.)

  • Space Balls (of Water!)

    Space Balls (of Water!)

    The microgravity environment of space is an excellent place to investigate fluid properties. In particular, surface tension and capillary action appear more dramatic in space because gravitational effects are not around to overwhelm them. In this animation, astronaut Don Petit injects a jet of air into a large sphere of water. Some of the water’s reaction is similar to what occurs on Earth when a drop falls into a pool; the jet of air creates a cavity in the water, which quickly inverts into an outward-moving jet of water. In this case, the jet is energetic enough to eject a large droplet. Meanwhile, the momentum, or inertia, from the air jet and subsequent ejection causes a series of waves to jostle the water sphere back and forth. Surface tension is strong enough to keep the water sphere intact, and eventually surface tension and viscosity inside the sphere will damp out the oscillations. You can see the video in full here. (Image credit: Don Petit/Science off the Sphere)

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    Vibrating Paint

    Paint is probably the Internet’s second favorite non-Newtonian fluid to vibrate on a speaker–after oobleck, of course. And the Slow Mo Guys’ take on it does not disappoint: it’s bursting (literally?) with great fluid dynamics. It all starts at 1:53 when the less dense green paint starts dimpling due to the Faraday instability. Notice how the dimples and jets of fluid are all roughly equally spaced. When the vibration surpasses the green paint’s critical amplitude, jets sprout all over, ejecting droplets as they bounce. At 3:15, watch as a tiny yellow jet collapses into a cavity before the cavity’s collapse and the vibration combine to propel a jet much further outward. The macro shots are brilliant as well; watch for ligaments of paint breaking into droplets due to the surface-tension-driven Plateau-Rayleigh instability. (Video credit: The Slow Mo Guys)

  • Liquid Umbrella

    Liquid Umbrella

    When a water drop strikes a pool, it can form a cavity in the free surface that will rebound into a jet. If a well-timed second drop hits that jet at the height of its rebound, the impact creates an umbrella-like sheet like the one seen here. The thin liquid sheet expands outward from the point of impact, its rim thickening and ejecting tiny filaments and droplets as surface tension causes a Plateau-Rayleigh-type instability. Tiny capillary waves–ripples–gather near the rim, an echo of the impact between the jet and the second drop. All of this occurs in less than the blink of an eye, but with high-speed video and perfectly-timed photography, we can capture the beauty of these everyday phenomena. (Photo credit: H. Westum)

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    Put the Lid Down When You Flush

    Hospital-acquired infections are a serious health problem. One potential source of contamination is through the spread of pathogen-bearing droplets emanating from toilet flushes. The video above includes high-speed flow visualization of the large and small droplets that get atomized during the flush of a standard hospital toilet. Both are problematic for the spread of pathogens; the large droplets settle quickly and contaminate nearby surfaces, but the small droplets can remain suspended in the air for an hour or more. Even more distressing is the finding that conventional cleaning products lower surface tension within the toilet, aggravating the problem by allowing even more small droplets to escape. To learn more, see the Bourouiba research group’s website. (Video credit: Bourouiba research group)

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    Holey Splashes

    A liquid’s surface tension can have a big effect on its splashes. In this video, a 5-mm droplet hits a surface covered in a thin layer of a liquid with lower viscosity and surface tension. The result is a dramatic effect on the spreading splash. As the initial curtain grows and expands, the lower surface tension of the impacted fluid thins the splash curtain. Fluid flows away from these areas due to the Marangoni effect, causing holes to grow. The sheet breaks up into a network of liquid filaments and ejected droplets before gravity can even bring it all to rest. For more, see this previous post and review paper. (Video credit: S. Thoroddsen et al.)

  • Dancing Jets

    Dancing Jets

    Vibrating a gas-liquid interface produces some exciting instability behaviors. The photo above shows air and silicone oil vibrated vertically within a prism. For the right frequencies and amplitudes, the vibrations produce liquid jets that shoot up and eject droplets as well as gas cavities and bubble transport below the interface. To see a similar experiment in action, check out this post. (Photo credit: T. J. O’Hern et al./Sandia National Laboratories)