4.2 Article

Stability of the Interface Between Two Immiscible Liquids in a Model Eye Subject to Saccadic Motion

Publisher

ASME
DOI: 10.1115/1.4053004

Keywords

eye; vitreous chamber; saccadic motion; two-phase flow; interface stability; emulsion

Funding

  1. University of Cambridge (W. D. Armstrong Fund)
  2. University of Cambridge (Cambridge Taiwan Trust)

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In this study, the stability of the interface between silicone oil and saline layers in a three-dimensional model of the eye chamber was investigated under different eye-like saccadic motions. The deformation of the interface was found to increase with Weber number and was roughly proportional to Weber number for values greater than 1. The presence of a lens resulted in higher deformation near this feature. Emulsification was not observed in any case.
The interface between silicone oil and saline layers in a three-dimensional model of the eye chamber was studied under different eye-like saccadic motions in order to determine the stability of the interface and propensity for emulsification in the bulk. The effect of level of fill, saccade amplitude, angular velocity, latency time, and orientation were investigated experimentally in spherical flasks with internal diameters 10, 28, and 40 mm, as well as a 28 mm diameter flask with an indent replicating the lens or the presence of a buckle. The deformation of the interface was quantified in terms of the change in its length in two-dimensional images. The deformation increased with Weber number, We, and was roughly proportional to We for We > 1. The presence of the lens gave rise to higher deformation near this feature. In all cases emulsification was not observed in either bulk fluid. The velocity profile in the spherical configuration was mapped using particle imaging velocimetry and is compared with an analytical solution and a short computational fluid dynamics simulation study. These confirm that the saccadic motion induces flow near the wall in the saline layer and significantly further into the chamber in the silicone oil. Surfactants soluble in the aqueous and oil phases reduced the interfacial tension, increasing deformation but did not lead to emulsification in the bulk.

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