Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
593460 Colloids and Surfaces A: Physicochemical and Engineering Aspects 2013 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Temperature applied to a regular, periodic two-dimensional foam.•Simulations show that, due to a Marangoni effect, vertices migrate.•Changes in foam structure mean changes in shear properties.•Temperature variations on the order of tens of degrees are significant.

A temperature gradient is applied to a single layer of bubbles in a regular two-dimensional foam (a ‘bubble staircase’), allowing a thermocapillary effect to occur and alter the structure and, thus, the shear modulus. In this model, local surface tension is a function of local surfactant concentration and local temperature. As thermal energy diffuses through the structure from an elevated (or lowered) temperature at a wall, the surface tension changes; in turn, surface tensions inequities result in a Marangoni flux of surfactant along the interface, re-adjusting surface tension inequities. An additional physicochemical equilibration of the film with a nearby bulk reservoir of surfactant (e.g., liquid-containing Plateau borders) allows for interaction of the films with their environment. As the temperature at the wall is increased, surface tension difference between the liquid on the hotter side and that on the cooler side also increases, causing migration of the vertices separating films towards the cooler side. This change in structure affects also the elastic modulus of the foam. In both simulation results and theoretical predictions, temperature variations on the order of tens of degrees are significant.

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Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Colloid and Surface Chemistry
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