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Published 1982 | public
Book Section - Chapter

Evaporative instability at the superheat limit

Abstract

The explosive vaporization of a single bubble inside a droplet of butane heated to the limit of superheat has been investigated experimentally using short-exposure photographs and fast-response pressure measurements. An interfacial instability driven by rapid evaporation has been observed on the surface of the bubbles. It is proposed that the Landau mechanism of instability, originally described in connection with the instability of laminar flames, also applies to rapid evaporation at the superheat limit. Calculations suggest that other technically important fluids may be even more unstable when boiling at the superheat limit. The rate of evaporation after the onset of instability is estimated from the experimental measurements to be two orders of magnitude greater than would be predicted by conventional bubble-growth theories that do not account for the effects of instability. An estimate of the mean density within the bubbles during the evaporative stage indicates that it is nearly equal to the critical density of butane.

Additional Information

© Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, The Hague 1982. This research was supported by the United States Department of Energy, Division of Chemical Sciences, under Project Agreement DE-AT03-80ER10634.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 20, 2023