Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
222602 Journal of Food Engineering 2016 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•The stirring of champagne glasses under the action of rising bubbles increases the perception of aromas.•Self-organized 2D convective cells were observed in champagne glasses through laser tomography.•Identical convection cells were evidenced in a model experiment, with a bubbly flow blown in a water goblet.•Various regimes were evidenced, from a highly unstable 8-cells regime, to a very stable 4-cells regime.

Under standard tasting conditions, homogeneous stirring of champagne under the action of rising bubbles confers an advantage compared with a situation where the liquid phase would be at rest. Convection helps renewal of the immediate subsurface layers with champagne from the bulk, thus facilitating the evaporation of volatile organic compounds, and therefore better revealing the champagne “bouquet”. Here, spontaneous and self-organized two-dimensional convective cells were evidenced (at the air/champagne interface) in a laser-etched coupe poured with champagne, through laser tomography. Various regimes were evidenced, from a highly unstable 8-cells regime, to a very stable 4-cells regime. Moreover, by blowing air bubbles through a nozzle positioned at the bottom of a goblet poured with water, and by using Particle Image Velocimetry, similar 2D convective cells were also evidenced at the air/water interface, thus pointing out the crucial role of ascending bubbles behind the formation of self-organized 2D convection cells.

Graphical abstractAmazing networks of convective cells revealed through laser tomography at the surface of champagne glasses.Figure optionsDownload full-size imageDownload as PowerPoint slide

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Chemical Engineering (General)
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