High-speed imaging of ultrasound driven cavitation bubbles in blind and through holes.

Ultrason Sonochem

Drittes Physikalisches Institut, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen, Friedrich-Hund-Platz 1, 37077 Göttingen, Germany. Electronic address:

Published: November 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • The research focuses on how ultrasonic cavitation bubbles behave in the microholes of PMMA plates, highlighting the lack of understanding in this area despite growing interest in ultrasonic cleaning methods.
  • Using high-speed imaging, the study investigates various sizes of blind and through holes, demonstrating that trapped gas in these holes can be effectively removed through ultrasound agitation.
  • The findings indicate that factors like hole diameter and liquid type influence bubble dynamics, and show that ultrasound can enhance liquid movement and mixing within small structures.

Article Abstract

The interest in application of ultrasonic cavitation for cleaning and surface treatment processes has increased greatly in the last decades. However, not much is known about the behavior of cavitation bubbles inside the microstructural features of the solid substrates. Here we report on an experimental study on dynamics of acoustically driven (38.5 kHz) cavitation bubbles inside the blind and through holes of PMMA plates by using high-speed imaging. Various diameters of blind (150, 200, 250 and 1000 µm) and through holes (200 and 1000 µm) were investigated. Gas bubbles are usually trapped in the holes during substrate immersion in the liquid thus preventing their complete wetting. We demonstrate that trapped gas can be successfully removed from the holes under ultrasound agitation. Besides the primary Bjerknes force and acoustic streaming, the shape oscillations of the trapped gas bubble seem to be a driving force for bubble removal out of the holes. We further discuss the bubble dynamics inside microholes for water and Cu salt solution. It is found that the hole diameter and partly the type of liquid media influences the number, size and dynamics of the cavitation bubbles. The experiments also showed that a large amount of the liquid volume inside the holes can be displaced within one acoustic cycle by the expansion of the cavitation bubbles. This confirmed that ultrasound is a very effective tool to intensify liquid exchange processes, and it might significantly improve micro mixing in small structures. The investigation of the effect of ultrasound power on the bubble density distribution revealed the possibility to control the cavitation bubble distribution inside the microholes. At a high ultrasound power (31.5 W) we observed the highest bubble density at the hole entrances, while reducing the ultrasound power by a factor of ten shifted the bubble locations to the inner end of the blind holes or to the middle of the through holes.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ultsonch.2018.04.015DOI Listing

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