kevin tee, OOPS! Excuse me, please. I mistakenly posted all that information about cavitation without understanding your question. While it is true that acoustic cavitation bubbles, when collapsing, can generate temperatures above 5,000 degrees Kelvin, this process alone does not “split” water into Hydrogen and Oxygen.
May I suggest you begin by reading and studying this Wikipedia article?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_splitting
Here you will discover many various ways to split water. Please use the references at the bottom.
Here find an article about using ultrasound to generate free radicals from sonolysis of water:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3171683/
Here is an article called “Direct Water Splitting Through Vibrating Piezoelectric
Microfibers in Water”.
"ABSTRACT We propose a mechanism, a piezoelectrochemical effect for the
direct conversion of mechanical energy to chemical energy. This phenomenon is
further applied for generating hydrogen and oxygen via direct water decomposition
by means of as-synthesized piezoelectric ZnO microfibers and BaTiO3 microdendrites."
http://www.geology.wisc.edu/.../Hong_et_al_2010_J_Phys_Chem_Lett.pdf
Here is a paper called “Sonophotocatalytic decomposition of water using TiO2 photocatalyst”. “In the present work, simultaneous irradiation of ultrasound and light in order to decompose water to hydrogen and oxygen continuously has been attempted. This attempt, if proved successful, will be a typical example for a hybrid effect.”
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11105323
kevin tee, I encourage you to continue searching for new, energy efficient, and innovative ways to decompose water. Your research, if successful, has the potential to revolutionize our entire production of energy.
Cheers and good luck,
Bobbywhy