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SCIENCE
INDEX
2000
2001
2002
Atmospheric Sciences
Scientists measure
energy dissipation in a single cavitating bubble
James
E. Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
(217) 244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
7/24/02
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Photo
by K.S. Suslick
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A
cloud of gas bubbles in a liquid excited by ultrasound (generated
by a titanium rod vibrating 20,000 times a second) can emit
flashes of light (sonoluminescence) due to extreme temperatures
inside the bubbles as they collapse. A single bubble can
be trapped in an ultrasonic field and driven into oscillation
will flash on every cycle when it reaches maximum compression.
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
Like fireflies, bubbles trapped and energized by ultrasound emit
light in a periodic rhythm. By holding a single bubble of gas in a standing
acoustic wave and driving it into pulsations, the bubble converts sonic
energy into light with clocklike regularity. At the same time, the intense
energy released by the implosive compression of the bubble rips molecules
apart. Chemists at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign have
now quantified those effects in a single bubble.
"During compression, the gas inside the bubble is heated, just
like the heating when a tire is pumping up. This energy is converted
into light emission, chemical reactions and mechanical energy,"
said Kenneth S. Suslick, a William H. and Janet Lycan Professor of Chemistry
at Illinois. "We were able to determine, for the first time, how
much of the energy goes into the chemistry of the bubble, and establish
an energy inventory during bubble collapse."
The experimental results reported by Suslick and postdoctoral
research associate Yuri Didenko in the July 25 issue of the journal
Nature have important implications for future work on the chemical
and physical effects of ultrasound.
The ability of ultrasound to induce chemical reactions has been studied
for industrial and medical applications, such as the breakdown of pollutants,
development of medical imaging agents, and making catalysts to clean
fuels. To truly harness this chemical process, however, scientists must
first understand, and then control, where the energy is going.
Sonochemistry arises from acoustic cavitation the formation,
growth and implosive collapse of small gas bubbles in a liquid blasted
with sound. The collapse of these cavitating bubbles generates intense
local heating, forming a hot spot in the cold liquid with a transient
temperature of about 9,000 degrees Fahrenheit, the pressure of about
1,000 atmospheres and the duration of about 1 billionth of a second.
For a rough comparison, these values correspond to the temperature of
the surface of the sun, the pressure at the bottom of the ocean, and
the lifetime of a lightning strike. Cavitation also is responsible for
submarine propeller noise, for erosion of turbines, and for the noise
that boiling water makes on the stove.
To study the energy dissipation during bubble collapse, Suslick and
Didenko first generate a single bubble about the size of a red blood
cell and draw it to the center of a spherical container where it becomes
trapped in an acoustic field. Driven by ultrasound, the bubble will
periodically grow and collapse. With each pulsation, the bubble emits
a flash of light known as single bubble sonoluminescence.
While observing the light from a single bubble is easy, measuring the
high-energy chemical reactions occurring within the tiny furnace is
a challenge. To measure chemical properties, the researchers use sensitive
fluorescent detection techniques.
"As the bubble expands, some of the gas in the surrounding solution
diffuses into the bubble and becomes trapped," Suslick said. "Upon
collapse, the gas is compressed and heated and undergoes chemical reactions."
Volatile molecules are ripped apart by the intense heat and pressure.
"Nitrogen and oxygen molecules get turned into nitrogen oxides,
just as they do in an internal combustion engine," Suslick said.
"Likewise, water molecules are torn apart, generating hydroxyl
radicals and hydrogen peroxide."
According to the researchers measurements, less than 1 millionth
of the bubbles energy is converted into light. A thousand times
more energy goes into chemical reactions. But the largest part of the
sonic energy is converted into mechanical energy, causing shock waves
and motion in the surrounding liquid.
Sonochemistry already has found diverse applications, including making
catalysts to remove sulfur from fuels and enhancing the chemical reactions
used in making pharmaceuticals.
These findings not only will impact future experiments in sonochemistry,
they also pose serious ramifications for the possibility of "sonofusion."
"Some researchers have suggested that conditions within a cavitating
bubble might be hot enough and have high enough pressure to generate
nuclear fusion," Suslick said. "But weve shown that
chemistry occurs within a collapsing bubble, and that it limits the
energy available during cavitation."
Whenever volatile molecules diffuse into the bubble, they will get shredded
during collapse, and that takes energy out of the bubble, Suslick said.
Temperatures reached during cavitation, for example, will be substantially
reduced by the ensuing chemical reactions.
While sonofusion is therefore unlikely to occur in volatile liquids
like water or acetone, "the possibility of fusion occurring in
low volatility fluids such as liquid metals and molten salts
cannot be ruled out at this time," Suslick said.
The National Science Foundation and the Defense Advanced Research Projects
Agency funded the work.
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