The hydraulic jump in circular jet impingement and in other thin liquid films
Abstract
The circular hydraulic jump exhibits behavior quite different from that commonly observed in planar jumps. Here we examine experimentally some of the causes and consequences of those differences. We suggest that surface tension plays a dominant role in establishing the shape of the circular jump for impinging jets. The importance of surface tension is a direct result of the thinness of the liquid films normally encountered in circular jump configurations. A sequence of instabilities appears in the jump's structure as the subcritical liquid film becomes thicker and surface tension effects decrease. These conclusions are corroborated by experiments on thin planar films which result in unusual jump structures, like those seen in circular jumps. In addition, we show that the standard momentum balance for the circular jump is effective only at relatively low supercritical Froude numbers or at low ratios of downstream to upstream depth. Typical values of those parameters for circular jumps are often quite large relative to the usual values for planar open-channel flows.
- Publication:
-
Experiments in Fluids
- Pub Date:
- July 1993
- DOI:
- 10.1007/BF00190950
- Bibcode:
- 1993ExFl...15..108L
- Keywords:
-
- Surface Tension;
- Liquid Film;
- Froude Number;
- Momentum Balance;
- Hydraulic Jump