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Periodic shock-emission from acoustically driven cavitation clouds: A source of the subharmonic signal

Authors :
Alfred Cuschieri
Michiel Postema
Bjoern Gerold
Cecilia Tapia-Siles
Sandy Cochran
Paul Prentice
Keith Johnston
University of Dundee
Department of Physics and Technology [Bergen] (UiB)
University of Bergen (UiB)
Source :
Ultrasonics, Ultrasonics, Elsevier, 2014, 54 (8), pp.2151-2158. ⟨10.1016/j.ultras.2014.06.011⟩
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

International audience; Single clouds of cavitation bubbles, driven by 254 kHz focused ultrasound at pressure amplitudes in the range of 0.48-1.22 MPa, have been observed via high-speed shadowgraphic imaging at 1 Â 10 6 frames per second. Clouds underwent repetitive growth, oscillation and collapse (GOC) cycles, with shock-waves emitted periodically at the instant of collapse during each cycle. The frequency of cloud collapse, and coincident shock-emission, was primarily dependent on the intensity of the focused ultrasound driving the activity. The lowest peak-to-peak pressure amplitude of 0.48 MPa generated shock-waves with an average period of 7.9 ± 0.5 ls, corresponding to a frequency of f 0 /2, half-harmonic to the fundamental driving. Increasing the intensity gave rise to GOC cycles and shock-emission periods of 11.8 ± 0.3, 15.8 ± 0.3, 19.8 ± 0.2 ls, at pressure amplitudes of 0.64, 0.92 and 1.22 MPa, corresponding to the higher-order subharmonics of f 0 /3, f 0 /4 and f 0 /5, respectively. Parallel passive acoustic detection, filtered for the fundamental driving, revealed features that correlated temporally to the shock-emissions observed via high-speed imaging, p(two-tailed) < 0.01 (r = 0.996, taken over all data). Subtracting the isolated acoustic shock profiles from the raw signal collected from the detector, demonstrated the removal of subharmonic spectral peaks, in the frequency domain. The larger cavitation clouds (>200 lm diameter, at maximum inflation), that developed under insonations of peak-to-peak pressure amplitudes >1.0 MPa, emitted shock-waves with two or more fronts suggesting non-uniform collapse of the cloud. The observations indicate that periodic shock-emissions from acoustically driven cavitation clouds provide a source for the cavitation subharmonic signal, and that shock structure may be used to study intra-cloud dynamics at sub-microsecond timescales.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0041624X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Ultrasonics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0032729cabe2e960dfe786b75660c664
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ultras.2014.06.011