A Free Sphere Reverses the Rebound Direction of a Near-Wall Cavitation Bubble

Abstract

A near-wall cavitation bubble is generally expected to acquire a wallward Kelvin-impulse bias and to rebound or jet toward the wall. Here we show that this canonical direction can be reversed by a wall-supported free sphere. High-speed imaging reveals a transition from away-from-wall to wallward rebound as the initial bubble--sphere separation is increased. By reconstructing the Kelvin impulse on a closed bubble boundary that includes both the visible free interface and the bubble-side contact closure, we find that the reversal is not governed primarily by the instantaneous velocity of the sphere. Instead, sphere displacement creates a contact closure on which the bubble-source contribution supplies an away-from-wall impulse. This contact-source impulse competes with a wallward background formed by the wall-image source and the quadrupolar component of the sphere-induced field. The resulting balance yields a calibrated geometric criterion, MK, and, in the comparable-size bubble--sphere regime, reduces to a contact number az zb/RK2. These results identify a contact-geometric mechanism by which a movable particle can redirect the first-cycle jet and rebound bias of a near-wall cavitation bubble.

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