Discrete Dynamics in Nature and Society
Volume 2006 (2006), Article ID 79717, 35 pages
doi:10.1155/DDNS/2006/79717
The Apollonian decay of beer foam bubble size distribution and the lattices of young diagrams and their correlated mixing functions
Institut für Angewandte und Physikalische Chemie–Arbeitsgruppe Chemische Synergetik, Universität Bremen, Bibliothekstraße NW 2, Bremen 28359, Germany
Received 4 August 2005; Accepted 3 October 2005
Copyright © 2006 S. Sauerbrei et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Abstract
We present different methods to characterise the
decay of beer foam by measuring the foam heights and recording
foam images as a function of time. It turns out that the foam
decay does not follow a simple exponential law but a higher-order
equation V(t)=a−bt−ct2.5, which can be explained as a
superposition of two processes, that is, drainage and bubble
rearrangement. The reorganisation of bubbles leads to the
structure of an Apollonian gasket with a fractal
dimension of D≈1.3058. Starting from foam images, we
study the temporal development of bubble size distributions and
give a model for the evolution towards the equilibrium state
based upon the idea of Ernst Ruch to describe irreversible
processes by lattices of Young diagrams. These lattices
generally involve a partial order, but one can force a total order
by mapping the diagrams onto the interval [0,1] using ordering functions such as the Shannon entropy. Several
entropy-like and nonentropy-like mixing
functions are discussed in comparison with the Young
order, each of them giving a special prejudice for understanding
the process of structure formation during beer foam decay.