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Unorthodox bubbles when boiling in cold water

Author(s)
Parker, ScottGranick, Steve
Issued Date
2014-01
DOI
10.1103/PhysRevE.89.013011
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/47282
Fulltext
https://journals.aps.org/pre/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevE.89.013011
Citation
PHYSICAL REVIEW E, v.89, no.1, pp.013011
Abstract
High-speed movies are taken when bubbles grow at gold surfaces heated spotwise with a near-infrared laser beam heating water below the boiling point (60-70 degrees C) with heating powers spanning the range from very low to so high that water fails to rewet the surface after bubbles detach. Roughly half the bubbles are conventional: They grow symmetrically through evaporation until buoyancy lifts them away. Others have unorthodox shapes and appear to contribute disproportionately to heat transfer efficiency: mushroom cloud shapes, violently explosive bubbles, and cavitation events, probably stimulated by a combination of superheating, convection, turbulence, and surface dewetting during the initial bubble growth. Moreover, bubbles often follow one another in complex sequences, often beginning with an unorthodox bubble that stirs the water, followed by several conventional bubbles. This large dataset is analyzed and discussed with emphasis on how explosive phenomena such as cavitation induce discrepancies from classical expectations about boiling.
Publisher
AMER PHYSICAL SOC
ISSN
1539-3755
Keyword
HEAT-TRANSFERCONTACT-ANGLEMICROBOILING BEHAVIORSURFACE WETTABILITYCAVITATION BUBBLESTHIN-FILMSPOOLTRANSITIONDYNAMICSCOLLAPSE

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