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Auteurs principaux: Saddier, Louis, Palotai, Ambre, Aksil, Matheo, Tsamados, Michel, Berhanu, Michael
Format: Preprint
Publié: 2023
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Accès en ligne:https://arxiv.org/abs/2310.16188
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author Saddier, Louis
Palotai, Ambre
Aksil, Matheo
Tsamados, Michel
Berhanu, Michael
author_facet Saddier, Louis
Palotai, Ambre
Aksil, Matheo
Tsamados, Michel
Berhanu, Michael
contents When particles of a few tens of microns are spread on the surface of water, they aggregate under the action of capillary forces and form a thin floating membrane, a particle raft. In a tank with a raft made of graphite powder, we generate in the laboratory gravity surface waves, whose wavelength {about 17 cm} is very large compared to the thickness of the raft {of order 10 microns}. For a sufficiently strong wave amplitude, the raft breaks up progressively by developing cracks and producing fragments whose sizes decrease on a time scale long compared to the period of the wave. We characterize the breaking mechanisms. Then, we investigate the area distribution of the fragments produced during the fragmentation process. The visual appearance of the fragments distributed in size and surrounded by open water bears a {notable} resemblance to the floes produced by the fracturing of sea ice by waves in the polar oceans. Fragmentation concepts and morphological tools built for sea ice floes can be applied to our macroscopic analog, on which the entire dynamic evolution is accessible. {However, the mechanic of the two systems differ, as our particle raft breaks due to the viscous stresses, whereas the sea-ice fractures due its bending by the waves.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2310_16188
institution arXiv
publishDate 2023
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Breaking of a floating particle raft by water waves
Saddier, Louis
Palotai, Ambre
Aksil, Matheo
Tsamados, Michel
Berhanu, Michael
Fluid Dynamics
Soft Condensed Matter
When particles of a few tens of microns are spread on the surface of water, they aggregate under the action of capillary forces and form a thin floating membrane, a particle raft. In a tank with a raft made of graphite powder, we generate in the laboratory gravity surface waves, whose wavelength {about 17 cm} is very large compared to the thickness of the raft {of order 10 microns}. For a sufficiently strong wave amplitude, the raft breaks up progressively by developing cracks and producing fragments whose sizes decrease on a time scale long compared to the period of the wave. We characterize the breaking mechanisms. Then, we investigate the area distribution of the fragments produced during the fragmentation process. The visual appearance of the fragments distributed in size and surrounded by open water bears a {notable} resemblance to the floes produced by the fracturing of sea ice by waves in the polar oceans. Fragmentation concepts and morphological tools built for sea ice floes can be applied to our macroscopic analog, on which the entire dynamic evolution is accessible. {However, the mechanic of the two systems differ, as our particle raft breaks due to the viscous stresses, whereas the sea-ice fractures due its bending by the waves.
title Breaking of a floating particle raft by water waves
topic Fluid Dynamics
Soft Condensed Matter
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2310.16188