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New interpretation of the effects of argon-saturating gas toward sonochemical reactions. | LitMetric

New interpretation of the effects of argon-saturating gas toward sonochemical reactions.

Ultrason Sonochem

Laboratory of Applied Chemistry and Materials Technology, University of Oum El-Bouaghi, P.O. Box 358, 04000 Oum El Bouaghi, Algeria.

Published: March 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • Argon exhibits higher sonochemical activity than polyatomic gases like O₂, but recent studies suggest O₂ can enhance bubble reactions despite its lower temperature.
  • Numerical simulations of reactions in collapsing acoustic bubbles reveal that OH radicals are produced primarily, with their production rate influenced by the saturating gas and the frequency of the acoustic field.
  • At frequencies above 515 kHz, OH radical production follows the order of Ar > O₂ > air > N₂, but this changes at lower frequencies to O₂ > air ∼ N₂ > Ar, indicating optimal conditions and radical consumption dynamics impact overall sonochemical activity.

Article Abstract

A number of literature reports showed that argon provides a more sonochemical activity than polyatomic gases because of its higher polytropic ratio; whereas several recent studies showed that polyatomic gases, such as O₂, can compensate the lower bubble temperature by the self decomposition in the bubble. In this work, we show for the first time a numerical interpretation of these controversial reported effects. Computer simulations of chemical reactions inside a collapsing acoustic bubble in water saturated by different gases (Ar, O₂, air and N₂) have been performed for different frequencies (213-1100 kHz). In all cases, OH radical is the main powerful oxidant created in the bubble. Unexpectedly, the order of saturating gases toward the production rate of OH radical was strongly frequency dependent. The rate of production decreases in the order of Ar>O₂>air>N₂ for frequencies above 515 kHz, and Ar starts to lose progressively its first order to the following gases with a gradually decreasing of frequency below 515 kHz up to a final order of O₂>air∼N₂>Ar at 213 kHz. The analysis of chemical kinetic results showed a surprising aspect: in some cases, there exists an optimum bubble temperature during collapse at which the chemical yield is much higher than that of the maximum bubble temperature achieved in the bubble. On the basis of this, we have concluded that the lower sonochemical activity induced by Ar for frequencies below 515 kHz is mainly due to the forte consumption of radicals inside a bubble prior the complete collapse being reached.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ultsonch.2014.09.009DOI Listing

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