Coalescence of microbubbles for the double-bubble-powered micromotor in viscous liquids near a confinement boundary

As a novel type of catalytic Janus micromotor (JM), a double-bubble-powered Janus micromotor has a distinct propulsion mechanism that is closely associated with the bubble coalescence in viscous liquids and corresponding flow physics. Based on high-speed camera and microscopic observation, we provid...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Flow
Main Authors: Leilei Wang, Fengchang Yang, Lina Wang, Li Chen, Minghua Huang, Dongshi Guan, Haihang Cui, Xu Zheng
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cambridge University Press 2025-01-01
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Online Access:https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S263342592500011X/type/journal_article
Description
Summary:As a novel type of catalytic Janus micromotor (JM), a double-bubble-powered Janus micromotor has a distinct propulsion mechanism that is closely associated with the bubble coalescence in viscous liquids and corresponding flow physics. Based on high-speed camera and microscopic observation, we provide the first experimental results of the coalescence of two microbubbles near a JM. By performing experiments with a wide range of Ohnesorge numbers, we identify a universal scaling law of bubble coalescence, which shows a cross-over at dimensionless time $\tilde{t}$ = 1 from an inertially limited viscous regime with linear scaling to an inertial regime with 1/2 scaling. Due to the confinement from the nearby solid JM, we observe asymmetric neck growth and find the combined effect of the surface tension and viscosity. The bubble coalescence and detachment can result in a high propulsion speed of ∼0.25 m s−1 for the JM. We further characterise two contributions to the JM’s displacement propelled by the coalescing bubble: the counteraction from the liquid due to bubble deformation and the momentum transfer during bubble detachment. Our findings provide a better understanding of the flow dynamics and transport mechanism in micro- and nano-scale devices like the swimming microrobot and bubble-powered microrocket.
ISSN:2633-4259