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Decay of standing foams: drainage,coalescence and collapse
Institution:1. Laboratoire de Physique des Solides, CNRS, Université Paris Sud, Université Paris Saclay, Bâtiment 510, 91400 Orsay Cedex, France;2. Departamento de Investigación en Polímeros y Materiales, Universidad de Sonora, Blvd. Luis Encinas y Rosales s/n 83000 Hermosillo, Sonora, México
Abstract:A summary of recent theoretical work on the decay of foams is presented. In a series of papers, we have proposed models for the drainage, coalescence and collapse of foams with time. Each of our papers dealt with a different aspect of foam decay and involved several assumptions. The fundamental equations, the assumptions involved and the results obtained are discussed in detail and presented within a unified framework.Film drainage is modeled using the Reynolds equation for flow between parallel circular disks and film rupture is assumed to occur when the film thickness falls below a certain critical thickness which corresponds to the maximum disjoining pressure. Fluid flow in the Plateau border channels is modeled using a Hagen-Poiseuille type flow in ducts with triangular cross-section.The foam is assumed to be composed of pentagonal dodecahedral bubbles and global conservation equations for the liquid, the gas and the surfactant are solved to obtain information about the state of the decaying foam as a function of time. Homogeneous foams produced by mixing and foams produced by bubbling (pneumatic foams) are considered. It is shown that a draining foam eventually arrives at a mechanical equilibrium when the opposing forces due to gravity and the Plateau-border suction gradient balance each other. The properties of the foam in this equilibrium state can be predicted from the surfactant and salt concentration in the foaming solution, the density of the liquid and the bubble radius.For homogeneous foams, it is possible to have conditions under which there is no drainage of liquid from the foam. There are three possible scenarios at equilibrium: separation of a single phase (separation of the continuous phase liquid by drainage or separation of the dispersed phase gas via collapse), separation of both phases (drainage and collapse occurs) or no phase separation (neither drainage nor collapse occurs). It is shown that the phase behavior depends on a single dimensionless group which is a measure of the relative magnitudes of the gravitational and capillary forces. A generalized phase diagram is presented which can be used to determine the phase behavior.For pneumatic foams, the effects of various system parameters such as the superficial gas velocity, the bubble size and the surfactant and salt concentrations on the rate of foam collapse and the evolution of liquid fraction profile are discussed. The steady state height attained by pneumatic foams when collapse occurs during generation is also evaluated.Bubble coalescence is assumed to occur due to the non-uniformity in the sizes of the films which constitute the faces of the polyhedral bubbles. This leads to a non-uniformity of film-drainage rates and hence of film thicknesses within any volume element in the foam. Smaller films drain faster and rupture earlier, causing the bubbles containing them to coalesce. This leads to a bubble size distribution in the foam, with the bubbles being larger in regions where greater coalescence has occurred.The formation of very stable Newton black films at high salt and surfactant concentrations is also explained.
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