In this paper, air entrainment by a liquid jet is studied. The size of
bubbles entrained by jets plunging into a liquid can be consistently
decreased to the 50-100 mu m range, and their number increased in a hi
ghly controllable fashion, by surrounding a mm-size jet by a hollow ca
p with a slightly larger inner diameter. When the right amount of air
is supplied to the cap, small air bubbles detach from a steady annular
cavity that forms around the jet and are entrained into the liquid. T
he fluid mechanical principles underlying this interesting and useful
effect are investigated experimentally and theoretically in this paper
. It is shown that a key aspect of the process is the jet surface roug
hness, which is studied quantitatively and explained in terms of the b
oundary layer instability inside the nozzle. The maximum bubble size i
s found to be nearly equal to one quarter of the wavelength of the jet
surface disturbances, consistent with a breakup process of relatively
large air pockets around the jet, as suggested by close-up pictures.
The average bubble size downstream of the cap increases proportionally
to the air to water flow ratio. Boundary integral simulations of the
air pocket formation are carried out. The results are found to be usef
ul in explaining important characteristics of the experiment such as t
he threshold fdr entrainment and cavity size.