Fluids (Aug 2023)

The Emptying of a Perforated Bottle: Influence of Perforation Size on Emptying Time and the Physical Nature of the Process

  • Callen Schwefler,
  • Peyton Nienaber,
  • Hans C. Mayer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/fluids8080225
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 8
p. 225

Abstract

Read online

An inverted bottle empties in a time Te,0 through a process called “glugging”, whereby gas and liquid compete at the neck (of diameter DN). In contrast, an open-top container empties in a much shorter time Te through “jetting” due to the lack of gas–liquid competition. Experiments and theory demonstrate that, by introducing a perforation (diameter dp), a bottle empties through glugging, jetting, or a combination of the two. For a certain range of dp/DN, the perforation increases the emptying time, and a particular value of dp/DN is associated with a maximum emptying time Te,max. We show that the transition from jetting to glugging is initiated by the jet velocity reaching a low threshold, thereby allowing a slug of air entry into the neck that stops jetting and starts the glugging. Once initiated, the glugging proceeds as though there is no perforation. Experimental results covered a range of Eötvös numbers from Eo∼ 20–200 (equivalent to a range of DN/Lc∼ 4–15, where Lc is the capillary length). The phenomenon of bottle emptying with a perforation adds to the body of bottle literature, which has already considered the influence of shape, inclination, liquid properties, etc.

Keywords