Oil repartition in a foam film architecture
Abstract
The propagation and distribution of oil inside the aqueous network of a foam is investigated in the case
where oil can invade the foam without breaking it. The oil is injected into an elementary foam
architecture of nine foam films and four vertices obtained by plunging a cubic frame in a foaming
solution. The frame is then deformed to trigger a film switching (topological rearrangement named T1)
and oil redistribution through this process is reported. Depending on the relative ratio of injected oil and
water, different behaviours are observed. For small amounts of oil, a globule is trapped in one single
node whereas for large oil volumes, it invades the four nodes of the foam film assembly. In both these
cases, a T1 process does not change the oil distribution. However, for intermediate volumes, oil initially
trapped in one node is able to propagate to the neighbouring nodes after the T1 process. This important
observation shows that topological rearrangements, which naturally occur in foams when they evolve
with time or when they flow, do affect the distribution of the third phase that they carry. These different
regimes are captured by simple modeling based on the capillary pressure balance inside the foam
network. Moreover, in the large-oil-volume limit, a transient situation is evidenced where an oil film is
trapped within the freshly formed water film. This oil film modifies the dynamics of the T1 process and
can be stable for up to a few minutes. We expect this mechanism to have consequences on the
rheological properties of oil-laden foams. Film rupture dynamics is also experimentally captured.
Origin : Publisher files allowed on an open archive
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