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1.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25215681

ABSTRACT

We study the stability of toroidal droplets inside a yield stress material. Similar to toroidal droplets in a viscous liquid, the slenderness of the torus controls whether it breaks into spherical droplets or grows thicker towards its center to coalesce onto itself and form a single spherical droplet. However, unlike tori generated in a viscous liquid, the elasticity of the outer medium can prevent either or both of these instabilities; this depends on the slenderness of the torus. Interestingly, we find that the value of the tube radius needed to prevent breakup is always larger than the value of the radius of the handle to prevent growth. This reflects the different deformations experienced by the yield stress material in either process. A simple model balancing the surface tension stress, which drives the evolution of the torus, and the yield stress, which favors its stability, accounts for all of our observations.


Subject(s)
Models, Theoretical , Elasticity , Surface Tension , Water
2.
Phys Rev Lett ; 102(23): 234501, 2009 Jun 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19658939

ABSTRACT

We use a simple method to generate toroidal droplets and study how they transform into spherical droplets. The method relies on the viscous forces exerted by a rotating continuous phase over a liquid which is extruded from an injection needle; the resultant jet is forced to close into a torus due to the imposed rotation. Once formed, the torus transforms into single or multiple spheres. Interestingly, we find there are two routes for this process depending on the aspect ratio of the torus. For thin tori, classical hydrodynamic instabilities induce its breakup into a precise number of droplets. By contrast, for sufficiently fat tori, unstable modes are unable to grow, and the torus evolves through a different route; it shrinks towards its center to coalesce onto itself, to finally form a single spherical droplet.

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