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Merging of soap bubbles and why surfactant matters

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The merging of two soap bubbles is a fundamental fluid mechanical process in foam formation. In the present experimental study the liquid films from two soap bubbles and brought together.… Click to show full abstract

The merging of two soap bubbles is a fundamental fluid mechanical process in foam formation. In the present experimental study the liquid films from two soap bubbles and brought together. Once the liquid layers initially separated by a gas sheet are bridged on a single spot the rapid merging of the two film proceeds. Thereby the connecting rim is rapidly accelerated into the separating gas layer. We show that due to the dimple formation the velocity is not uniform and the high acceleration causes initially a Rayleigh-Taylor instability of the liquid rim. At later times, the rim takes heals into a circular shape. However for sufficient high concentrations of the surfactant the unstable rim pinches off microbubbles resulting in a fractal dendritic structure after coalescence.

Keywords: soap bubbles; merging soap; surfactant matters; soap; bubbles surfactant

Journal Title: Applied Physics Letters
Year Published: 2020

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