An experimental and numerical study has been performed to improve the understanding
of the air/liquid interaction in an air-blasted breaking water sheet. This
research is focused in the near field close to the exit slit, because it is in this region
where instabilities develop and grow, leading to the sheet breakup. In the experiments,
several relevant parameters were measured including the sheet oscillation frequency
and wavelength, as well as the droplet size distribution and the amplification growth
rate. The flow was also investigated using linear instability theory. In the context
of existing papers on instability analysis, the numerical part of this work presents
two unique features. First, the air boundary layer is taken into account, and the
effects of air and liquid viscosity are revealed. Second, the equations are solved for
the same parameter values as those in the experiments, enabling a direct comparison
between calculations and measurements; although qualitatively the behaviour of the
measured variables is properly described, quantitative agreement is not satisfactory.
Limitations of the instability analysis in describing this problem are discussed. From
all the collected data, it is confirmed that the oscillation frequency strongly depends
on the air speed due to the near-nozzle air/water interaction. The wave propagates
with accelerating interface velocity which in our study ranges between the velocity
of the water and twice that value, depending on the air velocity. For a fixed water
velocity, the oscillation frequency varies linearly with the air velocity. This behaviour
can only be explained if the air boundary layer is considered.
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