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Journal ArticleDOI

Optical and acoustic investigations of the dynamics of laser-produced cavitation bubbles near a solid boundary

Alfred Vogel, +2 more
- 01 Sep 1989 - 
- Vol. 206, Iss: -1, pp 299-338
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TLDR
In this paper, the dynamics of laser-produced cavitation bubbles near a solid boundary and its dependence on the distance between bubble and wall are investigated experimentally by means of high-speed photography with up to 1 million frames/s that jet and counterjet formation and the development of a ring vortex resulting from the jet flow are general features of the bubble dynamics near solid boundaries.
Abstract
The dynamics of laser-produced cavitation bubbles near a solid boundary and its dependence on the distance between bubble and wall are investigated experimentally. It is shown by means of high-speed photography with up to 1 million frames/s that jet and counterjet formation and the development of a ring vortex resulting from the jet flow are general features of the bubble dynamics near solid boundaries. The fluid velocity field in the vicinity of the cavitation bubble is determined with time-resolved particle image velocimetry. A comparison of path lines deduced from successive measurements shows good agreement with the results of numerical calculations by Kucera & Blake (1988). The pressure amplitude, the profile and the energy of the acoustic transients emitted during spherical bubble collapse and the collapse near a rigid boundary are measured with a hydrophone and an optical detection technique. Sound emission is the main damping mechanism in spherical bubble collapse, whereas it plays a minor part in the damping of aspherical collapse. The duration of the acoustic transients is 20-30 ns. The highest pressure amplitudes at the solid boundary have been found for bubbles attached to the boundary. The pressure inside the bubble and at the boundary reaches about 2.5 kbar when the maximum bubble radius is 3.5 mm. The results are discussed with respect to the mechanism of cavitation erosion.

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Citations
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Mechanisms of pulsed laser ablation of biological tissues.

TL;DR: It was found that the structure and morphology also affect the energy transport among tissue constituents and therefore the ablation efficiency of biological tissues is increased.
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Single bubble sonoluminescence

TL;DR: A review of single-bubble sonoluminescence can be found in this article, where the authors survey the major areas of research in this field and present an overview of what is known and outlines some directions for future research.
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Cavitation erosion by single laser-produced bubbles

TL;DR: In this article, the dynamics of a single laser-generated cavitation bubble in water and the resulting surface damage on a flat metal specimen are investigated in detail with high-speed photography with framing rates of up to one million frames/s.
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Physics of bubble oscillations

TL;DR: In this paper, the basic equations for nonlinear bubble oscillation in sound fields are given, together with a survey of typical solutions, and three stability conditions for stable trapping of bubbles in standing sound fields: positional, spherical and diffusional stability.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Collapse of an initially spherical vapour cavity in the neighbourhood of a solid boundary

TL;DR: In this paper, a numerical method was proposed to solve the problem of balloon bubble collapse near a plane solid wall, using finite time steps and an iterative technique for applying the boundary conditions at infinity directly to the liquid at a finite distance from the free surface.
Journal ArticleDOI

Experimental investigations of cavitation-bubble collapse in the neighbourhood of a solid boundary

TL;DR: In this paper, the dynamics of the bubbles in the neighbourhood of a solid boundary were studied by means of high-speed photography using a rotating-mirror camera with framing rates of up to 300000 frame/s.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanisms of impulsive pressure generation and damage pit formation by bubble collapse

TL;DR: A detailed experimental study has been made to clarify the mechanism of impulsive pressure generation from a single bubble collapsing in a static fluid as discussed by the authors, which is the most essential and important research task concerned with cavitation damage.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Collapse of Cavitation Bubbles and the Pressures thereby Produced against Solid Boundaries

TL;DR: A broad review of this subject as a branch of hydrodynamics is presented in this article, referring both to the well known ''implosion'' mechanism first analysed by Lord Rayleigh and, more particularly, to the recently perceived possibility that effects of equally great violence, such as to damage solid boundaries, may arise through the impact of liquid jets formed by collapsing cavities.
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