Soap Film Drainage Using a Centrifugal Thin Film Balance

Abstract

Surface bubbles are an abundant source of aerosols, with important implications for climate processes. In this context, we investigate the stability and thinning dynamics of soap films under effective gravity fields. Experiments are performed using a centrifugal thin-film balance capable of generating accelerations from 0.2 up to 100 times standard gravity, combined with thin-film interferometry to obtain time-resolved thickness maps. Across all experimental conditions, the drainage dynamics are shown to be governed by capillary suction and marginal regeneration—a mechanism in which thick regions of the film are continuously replaced by thin film elements (TFEs) formed at the meniscus. We consistently recover a thickness ratio of 0.8–0.9 between the TFEs and the adjacent film, in agreement with previous observations under standard gravity. The measured thinning rates also follow the predicted scaling laws. We identified that effective gravity has three distinct effects: (i) it induces a strong stretching of the initial film, extending well beyond the linear-elastic regime; (ii) it controls the meniscus size, and thereby the amplitude of the capillary suction and the drainage rate; and (iii) it reveals an inertia-to-viscous transition in the motion of TFEs within the film. These results are supported by theoretical modeling and highlight the robustness of marginal regeneration and capillary-driven drainage under extreme gravity conditions.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
11 Nov 2025
Accepted
10 Feb 2026
First published
11 Feb 2026

Soft Matter, 2026, Accepted Manuscript

Soap Film Drainage Using a Centrifugal Thin Film Balance

A. Monier, K. Gutierrez, C. Claudet, F. Celestini, C. Brouzet and C. Raufaste, Soft Matter, 2026, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D5SM01129A

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