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Fluidic levitation of bubbles, drops and solid spheres

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 November 2025

James S. Sharp*
Affiliation:
School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Nottingham, University Park, Nottingham NG7 2RD, UK
Anna Kalogirou
Affiliation:
School of Mathematical Sciences, University of Nottingham, University Park, Nottingham NG7 2RD, UK
*
Corresponding author: James S. Sharp, james.sharp@nottingham.ac.uk

Abstract

Fluidic levitation of different types of objects is achieved using laboratory experiments and described using simple mathematical models. Air bubbles, liquid tetrabromoethane droplets and solid spherical polytetrafluoroethylene beads were levitated in flowing water inside vertically oriented cylindrical tubes having diameters of 5, 8 and 10 mm. The centre of mass of all levitated objects was observed to undergo horizontal oscillations once a stable levitation point had been established. A simple model that considers the balance of gravitational, buoyancy and drag forces (as well as wall effects) was used to successfully predict the flow rates that are required to obtain stable levitation of objects with a range of different sizes. Horizontal motion was shown to be driven by vortex shedding of the objects in the tubes, and the dependence of the frequency of oscillation on their size was predicted.

Information

Type
JFM Papers
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2025. Published by Cambridge University Press
Figure 0

Figure 1. Panel (a) shows a schematic diagram of the experimental set-up, where a 12 V DC pump is used to force water through a closed loop and thereby levitate solid particles, liquid droplets or air bubbles. Panel (b) shows a schematic section of the tube where the objects are levitated and defines the parameters used in the model (see text for definitions of all parameters). Panels (c) and (d) show images of the experimental set-up and a levitated air bubble inside a 5 mm diameter tube, respectively.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Aspect ratio of air bubbles and tetrabromoethane droplets. Data shown are for the reduced half-width ($\epsilon a/R$) plotted as a function of the reduced height ($a/R$). The white stars correspond to tetrabromoethane droplets levitated inside a 10 mm diameter tube, while the remaining symbols correspond to air bubbles levitated inside tubes with internal diameters of 5 mm (blue diamonds), 8 mm (red squares) and 10 mm (green circles), respectively. The lines are fits and provide the values of the aspect ratio $\epsilon$ for each data set. The slopes give $\epsilon = 1.02 \pm 0.05$ (solid), $\epsilon = 1.31 \pm 0.04$ (dashed) and $\epsilon = 1.54 \pm 0.05$ (dotted), respectively. The images shown as insets present bubble and droplet shapes at different aspect ratios. Scale bars correspond to 2 mm in each image.

Figure 2

Table 1. Physical properties of materials at room temperature.

Figure 3

Figure 3. Motion of a levitated PTFE bead. Panel (a) shows the horizontal (red line) and vertical (blue line) displacement of an 8 mm diameter PTFE bead levitating in flow inside a 10 mm diameter tube. Panel (b) shows the power spectrum of the horizontal motion data, obtained by Fourier transformation of the data in the left panel. The inset in panel (b) shows examples of images of the position of the bead taken at different times during its motion.

Figure 4

Figure 4. Variation of parameter $\lambda$ as a function of the reduced half-width $(\epsilon \xi = {\epsilon a}/{R})$ of the levitating object, obtained from (3.3) for air bubbles in 5 mm (blue line), 8 mm (red line) and 10 mm (green line) inner diameter tubes. Curves are also plotted for solid PTFE spheres (black solid line) and liquid tetrabromoethane droplets (black dashed line) in 10 mm diameter tubes. For each curve, the value of the viscosity ratio $\sigma$ was determined from table 1. The values of the aspect ratio $\epsilon$ used for bubbles and droplets were obtained from the fits to the data in figure 2, while $\epsilon =1$ was used for the solid spheres.

Figure 5

Figure 5. Flow rate for levitation of (a) air bubbles, (b) liquid tetrabromoethane droplets and (c) solid PTFE particles as a function of the normalised half-width, ${\epsilon a}/{R}$, of the object being levitated. Panel (a) shows data for air bubbles levitated inside tubes with internal diameters of 5 mm (blue diamonds), 8 mm (red squares) and 10 mm (green circles). Equation (3.5) was used to generate the solid lines using material parameters given in table 1.

Figure 6

Figure 6. Vibrational frequencies of (a) air bubbles, (b) liquid tetrabromoethane droplets and (c) solid PTFE particles as a function of the normalised half-width, ${\epsilon a}/{R}$, of the levitated objects. Panel (a) shows data for air bubbles levitated inside tubes with internal diameters of 5 mm (blue diamonds), 8 mm (red squares) and 10 mm (green circles). Equation (3.9) was used to generate the dashed lines using material parameters given in table 1.

Figure 7

Figure 7. Examples of shape oscillations in air bubbles and liquid tetrabromoethane droplets inside 10 mm diameter tubes. Data in the first two columns correspond to air bubbles with values of ${\epsilon a}/{R}=0.64$ (column a) or ${\epsilon a}/{R}=0.80$ (column b), while data in the last two columns are for tetrabromoethane droplets with ${\epsilon a}/{R}=0.42$ (column c) or ${\epsilon a}/{R}=0.69$ (column d). The rows correspond to images captured at 23 ms time intervals. The scale bar in each image corresponds to 3 mm.

Supplementary material: File

Sharp and Kalogirou supplementary movie

Short movie showing vortex shedding behind a fluidically levitated PTFE sphere. Movie recorded at 200 frames per second. Playback speed 30 frames per second.
Download Sharp and Kalogirou supplementary movie(File)
File 13.7 MB