Modeling Gas Dissolution

This section describes the particular phase-change type that concerns gas dissolution.

What is Gas Dissolution?

Liquid can dissolve a gas up to a certain maximal concentration (saturation).

When there are changes in the pressure or temperature (or both), the liquid can become over-saturated or under-saturated. In the over-saturated case, gas bubbles will form and grow in the liquid; in the under-saturated case the gas bubbles will shrink and disappear. For a multi-component gas phase, the bubbles of free gas are a mixture of those components that come out of the solution.

The presence of dissolved and free gas in a liquid affects other properties, such as the rates of cavitation.