Dripping to Jetting Transitions in Coflowing Liquid Streams
Abstract
A liquid forced through an orifice into an immiscible fluid ultimately breaks into drops due to surface tension. Drop formation can occur right at the orifice in a dripping process. Alternatively, the inner fluid can form a jet, which breaks into drops further downstream. The transition from dripping to jetting is not understood for coflowing fluid streams, unlike the case of drop formation in air. We show that in a coflowing stream this transition can be characterized by a state diagram that depends on the capillary number of the outer fluid and the Weber number of the inner fluid.
- Publication:
-
Physical Review Letters
- Pub Date:
- August 2007
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 2007PhRvL..99i4502U
- Keywords:
-
- 47.61.Jd;
- 47.20.Dr;
- 47.27.nf;
- 47.55.db;
- Multiphase flows;
- Surface-tension-driven instability;
- Flows in pipes and nozzles;
- Drop and bubble formation