History effects on the gas exchange between a bubble and a liquid
ORAL
Abstract
History effects are a distinctive feature of diffusive processes. For a diffusing gas bubble at rest in a liquid, such effects arise when the concentration of dissolved gas at the bubble surface, connected to the gas pressure by Henry’s law, depends on time. This time dependence can be caused by several factors, such as varying ambient pressure, mole fraction in a multicomponent gas bubble, surface tension and others. In this study we consider history effects in the three situations mentioned above. More specifically, rectified diffusion in an oscillating ambient pressure field is explored under conditions when the diffusion length is larger than the bubble radius. History effects are found to be important in determining the threshold conditions for rectified diffusion. In contrast, history effects are small in the other two cases.
*Supported by the BP/The Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative through the University of Texas Marine Science Institute (DROPPS II consortium: “Dispersion Research on Oil: Physics and Plankton Studies”).
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