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Published June 2014 | Published
Journal Article Open

Statistical mechanics of two-dimensional shuffled foams: Geometry-topology correlation in small or large disorder limits

Abstract

Bubble monolayers are model systems for experiments and simulations of two-dimensional packing problems of deformable objects. We explore the relation between the distributions of the number of bubble sides (topology) and the bubble areas (geometry) in the low liquid fraction limit. We use a statistical model [M. Durand, Europhys. Lett. 90, 60002 (2010)] which takes into account Plateau laws. We predict the correlation between geometrical disorder (bubble size dispersity) and topological disorder (width of bubble side number distribution) over an extended range of bubble size dispersities. Extensive data sets arising from shuffled foam experiments, surface evolver simulations, and cellular Potts model simulations all collapse surprisingly well and coincide with the model predictions, even at extremely high size dispersity. At moderate size dispersity, we recover our earlier approximate predictions [M. Durand, J. Kafer, C. Quilliet, S. Cox, S. A. Talebi, and F. Graner, Phys. Rev. Lett. 107, 168304 (2011)]. At extremely low dispersity, when approaching the perfectly regular honeycomb pattern, we study how both geometrical and topological disorders vanish. We identify a crystallization mechanism and explore it quantitatively in the case of bidisperse foams. Due to the deformability of the bubbles, foams can crystallize over a larger range of size dispersities than hard disks. The model predicts that the crystallization transition occurs when the ratio of largest to smallest bubble radii is 1.4.

Additional Information

© 2014 American Physical Society. Received 2 April 2014; published 19 June 2014. J.K. thanks A.F.M. Marée for help with the Potts simulations. A.M.K. thanks P. Grassia, G. Schroeder-Turk, and K. Mecke for their hospitality. S.C. thanks the FP7 IAPP project HYDROFRAC (Grant No. PIAP-GA-2009-251475) for funding. S.C. and A.M.K. acknowledge financial support from the Royal Academy of Engineering Distinguished Visiting Fellowship Scheme, and hospitality from S. Neethling. F.v.S. is supported by the United States Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Materials Sciences and Engineering. M.D., C.Q., and F.G. have belonged to the CNRS consortium "Foams and Emulsions," F.G. and J.K. to the CNRS consortium "CellTis," and M.D. to the CNRS consortium "MePhy."

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August 20, 2023
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