Sliding bubbles on a hot horizontal wire in a subcooled bath

ORAL

Abstract

When a wire is heated up to the boiling point in a liquid bath some bubbles will nucleate on the wire surface. Traditional nucleate boiling theory predicts that bubbles generate from active nucleate site, grow up and depart from the heating surface due to buoyancy and inertia. However, an alternative scenario is presented in the literature for a subcooled bath: bubbles slide along the horizontal wire before departing. New experiments were performed by using a constantan wire and different liquids, varying the injected power. Silicone oil, water and even liquid nitrogen were tested in order to vary wetting conditions, liquid viscosities and surface tensions. We explored the influence of the wire diameter and of the subcooled bath temperature. We observed, of course, sliding motion, but also a wide range of behaviors from bubbles clustering to film boiling. We noticed that bubbles could change moving sense, especially when encountering with another bubble. The bubble speed is carefully measured and can reach more than 100 mm/s for a millimetric bubble. We investigated the dependence of the speed on the different parameters and found that this speed is, for a given configuration, quite independent of the injected power. We understand these phenomena in terms of Marangoni effects.

Authors

  • Alexis Duchesne

    GRASP - University of Liege, GRASP- Universit\'e de Li\`ege, GRASP, Group for Research and Applications of Statistical Physics, Univ. of Liège, Belgium

  • Charles Dubois

    GRASP - University of Liege, GRASP- Universit\'e de Li\`ege

  • Herve Caps

    GRASP - University of Liege, GRASP- Universit\'e de Li\`ege, GRASP-University of Li\`ege, Belgium, GRASP, Université de Liège, Liège, Belgium