Statistics of drops generated from ensembles of randomly corrugated ligaments
ORAL
Abstract
The size of drops generated by the capillary-driven disintegration of liquid ligaments plays a fundamental role in several important natural and industrial phenomena. The inherent non-linearities of the equations governing ligament destabilization lead to significant differences in the resulting drop sizes, owing to small fluctuations in the myriad initial conditions. Previous experiments and simulations reveal a variety of drop size distributions, corresponding to competing underlying physical interpretations. Here, we perform numerical simulations of individual ligaments, the deterministic breakup of which is triggered by random initial surface corrugations. Stochasticity is incorporated by simulating a large ensemble of such ligaments, each realization corresponding to a random but unique initial configuration. The resulting probability distributions reveal three stable drop sizes, generated via a sequence of two distinct breakup stages. The probability of the large sizes is described by volume-weighted Poisson and Log-Normal distributions for the first and second breakup stages, respectively. The study demonstrates a quantitatively precise, statistically robust and reproducible framework for studying drop sizes resulting from complex liquid fragmentation phenomena.
*This work has benefited from access to the HPC resources of CINES under the allocations 2018-A0052B07760 and 2019 - A0072B07760, and the resources of TGCC under the project 2020225418 granted respectively by GENCI and PRACE and by the Flash Covid. Support by the ERC ADV grant TRUFLOW and by the Fondation de France for the ANR action Flash Covid is acknowledged by the PRACE Flash Covid grant of computer time. We thank Dr. Lydia Bourouiba for the fruitful discussions regarding liquid fragmentation, Dr. Gareth McKinley for planting the seeds of the idea, and Dr. Stéphane Popinet for his contributions towards development of the Basilisk solver.
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Publication:Statistics of drops generated from ensembles of randomly corrugated ligaments. https://arxiv.org/abs/2106.16192