4.7 Article

Numerical investigation of non-condensable gas effect on vapor bubble collapse

Journal

PHYSICS OF FLUIDS
Volume 33, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/5.0062399

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Funding

  1. Gauss Centre for Supercomputing e.V.

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Numerical investigation was conducted on the effect of non-condensable gas inside a vapor bubble on bubble dynamics and collapse pressure, with a multi-component model proposed and validated for vapor bubbles containing gas. The simulations showed that the non-condensable gas has a significant impact on the rebound and damping of shock waves emitted during bubble collapse.
We numerically investigate the effect of non-condensable gas inside a vapor bubble on bubble dynamics, collapse pressure, and pressure impact of spherical and aspherical bubble collapses. Free gas inside a vapor bubble has a damping effect that can weaken the pressure wave and enhance the bubble rebound. To estimate this effect numerically, we derive and validate a multi-component model for vapor bubbles containing gas. For the cavitating liquid and the non-condensable gas, we employ a homogeneous mixture model with a coupled equation of state for all components. The cavitation model for the cavitating liquid is a barotropic thermodynamic equilibrium model. Compressibility of all phases is considered in order to capture the shock wave of the bubble collapse. After validating the model with an analytical energy partitioning model, simulations of collapsing wall-attached bubbles with different stand-off distances are performed. The effect of the non-condensable gas on rebound and damping of the emitted shock wave is well captured.

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