Ultrasonic Cavitation: Can I Produce Acoustic Cavitation?

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Producing acoustic cavitation requires specific ultrasound frequencies and intensities, with a typical setup using 20kHz at 2kW. While higher frequencies may be explored, achieving effective cavitation without submerging transducers in liquid is challenging due to significant acoustic impedance mismatches. Direct coupling to the liquid is essential to minimize power loss from reflections at the air-liquid interface. Cavitation occurs when pressure drops below vapor pressure, leading to bubble formation and potential chemical reactions. Understanding these principles is crucial for successful experimentation with acoustic cavitation.
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Hi,

I was wondering whether I could practically produce ultrasound capable of producing acoustic cavitation. I tried an arduino module at 40kHz, but this did bot work, would a higher frequency work? If so, is there a practical way of achieving this?

Thanks in advance.
 
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There is quite a lot of lit about acoustic cavitation - have you had a go getting hold of some?
It looks like your frequency is high enough but your intensity probably isn't.

A fairly typical setup would use 20kHz at 2kW.
i.e. http://www.hielscher.com/cavitat.htm
 
I was wondering of there was a way to apply the ultrasound without submerging in the liquid, i.e positioning transducers very close to the liquid surface. Would this be possible?
 
You need good sound coupling to the water. When waves encounter a barrier where the material media changes properties there will be some reflection. It's doable but keep in mind that you'll lose some power from reflections off the water's surface.
 
In my estimation we cannot expect to induce cavitation by the application of the sound energy "very close to the liquid surface". As Okefenokee says, there is a BIG acoustic impeadance mis-match unlesss there is direct coupling. Hard to believe enough acoustic energy to cause cavitation could be forced across the transducer-air- liquid barrier. Why do sonograms require the "contact gel" to image a fetus?

Cavitation in physics is the formation of vapor bubbles of a liquid in a region where the pressure of the liquid falls below its vapor pressure. The extreme pressure reduction literally “rips” the water molecules apart and creates a bubble. This bubble contains gas that had been dissolved in the liquid. Cavitation bubbles can easily be seen near the tips of a rapidly spinning propeller under water. For a good description of hydrodynamic cavitation, see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cavitation

Cavitation in liquids may also be caused when the low pressure portion of a powerful acoustic (sound) wave causes a bubble to form. When a cavitation bubble collapses it compresses the gas and vapor inside it to an extremely high temperature. This can be used to cause chemical reactions not possible without acoustic cavitation. Under some specific conditions the process will emit visible light called “sonoluminescence”.

An excellent technical paper authored by some of the original pioneers in the field is this:
“Acoustic cavitation and its chemical consequences”
By Kenneth S. Suslick, et al.
http://www.scs.illinois.edu/suslick/documents/philtrans99335.pdf

See these images for acoustic cavitation:
http://www.google.com/search?q=acou...QWiloCgAg&sqi=2&ved=0CD0QsAQ&biw=1333&bih=648

Suggested search terms you may use in Google searches to learn more:

hydrodynamic cavitation
physics of acoustic cavitation in liquids
acoustic cavitation ultrasound
sonoluminescence

Cheers, Bobbywhy
 
So your project had turned from something you needed to remove the bubbles from to something you want to add bubbles to?
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
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