The behavior of a liquid drop levitated and drastically flattened by an intense sound fieldThe deformation and break-up are studied of a liquid drop in levitation through the radiation pressure. Using high-speed photography ripples are observed on the central membrane of the drop, atomization of the membrane by emission of satellite drops from its unstable ripples, and shattering of the drop after upward buckling like an umbrella, or after horizontal expansion like a sheet. These effects are captured on video. The ripples are theorized to be capillary waves generated by the Faraday instability excited by the sound vibration. Atomization occurs whenever the membrane becomes so thin that the vibration is sufficiently intense. The vibration leads to a destabilizing Bernoulli correction in the static pressure. Buckling occurs when an existent equilibrium is unstable to a radial (i.e., tangential) motion of the membrane because of the Bernoulli effect. Besides, the radiation stress at the rim of the drop is a suction stress which can make equilibrium impossible, leading to the horizontal expansion and the subsequent break-up.
Document ID
19920041111
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Lee, C. P. (NASA Headquarters Washington, DC United States)
Anilkumar, A. V. (NASA Headquarters Washington, DC United States)
Wang, Taylor G. (Vanderbilt University Nashville, TN, United States)