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Ultrasound homogenises suspensions of hydrophobic particles

Authors :
Michiel Postema
Ryunosuke Matsumoto
Ri-Ichiro Shimizu
Poortinga, Albert T.
Nobuki Kudo
University of the Witwatersrand [Johannesburg] (WITS)
Hokkaido University [Sapporo, Japan]
Eindhoven University of Technology [Eindhoven] (TU/e)
Source :
Proceedings of Symposium on Ultrasonic Electronics, The 40th Symposium on UltraSonic Electronics (USE2019), Proceedings of Symposium on Ultrasonic Electronics, Organizing Committee of USE 2019, Institute for Ultrasonic Electronics, Kyotanabe, Kyoto, Japan, 2019, The 40th Symposium on UltraSonic Electronics (USE2019), Monday 25th-Wednesday 27th, November 2019, Academy Common, Meiji University (Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo, Japan), pp.2E2-4, HAL
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
arXiv, 2019.

Abstract

Hydrophobic particles inherently resist being suspended. Hydrophobic particles might be regarded as tiny solid particles surrounded by a thin gaseous shell. It has been hypothesised that hydrophobic particles act as cavitation nuclei. This cavitation behaviour would explain the translation speeds observed when hydrophobic polystyrene microspheres were driven through a liquid medium by means of ultrasound. These translation speeds corresponded to those observed with gas microbubbles of similar sizes. If hydrophobic particles do have a thin gaseous layer surrounding the solid cores, a sound field of sufficient pressure amplitude might force the gas layer to form and inertial cavity and subsequently fragment during the collapse phase. In this study, we investigated whether hydrophobic particles can be forced to suspend by using ultrasound. Hydrophobic particles of the materials C65 and ZnO can be forced to be suspended in water using ultrasound. The high-speed observations confirm that hydrophobic particles can act as cavitation nuclei. The lack of cavitation after the first pulse indicates that the gas layer surrounding the hydrophobic particle dissolves after inertial cavitation.<br />Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures (7 frames), Submitted to the 40th Symposium on UltraSonic Electronics (USE2019)

Details

ISSN :
21899606
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings of Symposium on Ultrasonic Electronics, The 40th Symposium on UltraSonic Electronics (USE2019), Proceedings of Symposium on Ultrasonic Electronics, Organizing Committee of USE 2019, Institute for Ultrasonic Electronics, Kyotanabe, Kyoto, Japan, 2019, The 40th Symposium on UltraSonic Electronics (USE2019), Monday 25th-Wednesday 27th, November 2019, Academy Common, Meiji University (Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo, Japan), pp.2E2-4, HAL
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....14cd963fe772e296a9824c2d57ba715d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1910.02714