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Poster Session


Bubble-fiber interactions in multiphase flow: A pathway to sustainable paper manufacturing


October 22, 2025 (Wednesday) 6:30


Poster Session / Sweeney Ballroom E+F

(Click on name to view author profile)

  1. McMaster, Anthony (Sandia National Laboratories, Energetics, Multiphase, & Soft Matter R&D)
  2. Roberts, Christine C. (Sandia National Laboratories)
  3. Halls, Benjamin (Sandia National Laboratories, Experimental Thermal and Fluid Science)

(in printed abstract book)
Anthony McMaster, Christine C. Roberts and Benjamin Halls
Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM


McMaster, Anthony


experimental methods; industrial applications; surfactants; sustainability


In a 2014 report, the DOE recognized the paper industry as the third largest consumer of energy in the United States, accounting for 13% of the manufacturing energy consumed nationally. Because water is the predominate carrier fluid for paper manufacturing, evaporative drying at the end of the process can account for 2/3 of paper making energy consumption. Accordingly, fiber foams, where the carrier fluid is a bubbly foam, present a path for a predicted 10%-40% energy savings, without sacrificing product quality. To inform industrial processes, a pressure driven pipe flow apparatus is designed and used to simulate the paper making process. A representative fiber foam made of aqueous sodium dodecyl sulfate is examined as a function of gas volume fractions (20% to 80%) and fiber content (0% to 2%). Constitutive models for fiber-laden foam will subsequently inform computational models for designing nozzles and processes that will demonstrate the utility of this carrier fluid for the paper making industry.