Issue 2, 2006

The crystal structure of bubbles in the wet foam limit

Abstract

We have observed a rich variety of three-dimensional crystal and defect structures spontaneously formed by small (diameter 200 µm) bubbles in a wet foam. The observations confirm and extend those made by Bragg and Nye in 1947. However, while their experiments with two-dimensional bubble rafts have stimulated many researchers, their work on three-dimensional wet assemblages does not appear to have been followed up. These ordered packings now pose intriguing questions for the physics of foams. The bubbles seem too large for conventional thermodynamics and kinetics to easily explain the high degree of ordering.

Graphical abstract: The crystal structure of bubbles in the wet foam limit

Additions and corrections

Article information

Article type
Communication
Submitted
02 Nov 2005
Accepted
19 Dec 2005
First published
06 Jan 2006

Soft Matter, 2006,2, 129-134

The crystal structure of bubbles in the wet foam limit

A. van der Net, W. Drenckhan, D. Weaire and S. Hutzler, Soft Matter, 2006, 2, 129 DOI: 10.1039/B515537A

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