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Spherical focusing of acoustic pulses in a liquid

Authors :
Georgy Sankin
Source :
Acoustical Physics. 50:212-221
Publication Year :
2004
Publisher :
Pleiades Publishing Ltd, 2004.

Abstract

Nonlinear processes accompanying the focusing of a microsecond acoustic pulse produced by an electromagnetic source shaped as a spherical segment are investigated. The processes are considered to be far from the boundaries of a liquid, in the absence of cavitation. Detailed measurements of the pressure field by a fiber-optic sensor and high-speed photography of the shock front are performed. The pressure field is found to be determined by the nonlinear effects that occur in the course of the propagation of the initial converging compression wave and an edge rarefaction wave. The peak pressure amplitudes at the focus are 75 and −42 MPa for the compression and rarefaction waves, respectively, at the maximum voltage of the pulse generator in use. The measured length of the compression wave front is equal to the response time of the sensor (8 ns). The pressure amplitude is shown to be limited by the irregularity of the propagation of a shock wave in the form of Mach’s disk. At the focus, the pressure gradient across the radiator axis reaches 0.5 atm/μm, while the diameter of the focal spot is 2.5±0.2 mm. The focus of the edge rarefaction wave formed due to diffraction is located closer to the radiator than the focus of the compression wave, which may facilitate the study of the biological effect of cavitation independently of the shear motion of the medium.

Details

ISSN :
15626865 and 10637710
Volume :
50
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Acoustical Physics
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........d72df09851d9879b50ac985351f7a19c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1134/1.1675878