Varying the rate of injection of air into a wet granular mixture contained in a Hele Shaw cell results in very different flow patterns. At low injection rates, stick-slip bubbles form. As the injection rate increases, patterns are affected by “temporal intermittency” where continuous motion is occasionally interrupted by jamming. Increasing the injection rate still further results in Saffman-Taylor-like fingering. #
Tag: stick-slip bubbles

Air Injection Patterns
This timelapse video demonstrates the pattern variations occurring when air is injected into a wet granular mixture in a Hele-Shaw cell. When the filling fraction–the percentage of the total volume between the glass sheets taken up by grains–is relatively small, the pattern formed by the injected air develops continuously and looks similar to Saffman-Taylor fingering seen in pure fluids. When the filling fraction is larger, however, the pattern forms in an intermittent fashion with new stick-slip bubbles of air forming as narrow sections of granular material slip and give way. #
