Characterization of HIFU transducers designed for sonochemistry application: Acoustic streaming

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TitreCharacterization of HIFU transducers designed for sonochemistry application: Acoustic streaming
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2016
AuteursHallez L., Touyeras F., Hihn J-Y, Bailly Y.
JournalULTRASONICS SONOCHEMISTRY
Volume29
Pagination420-427
Date PublishedMAR
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN1350-4177
Mots-clésAcoustic streaming, Bubbles behavior, Cavitation, HIFU, Hydrodynamic behavior
Résumé

Cavitation distribution in a High Intensity Focused Ultrasound sonoreactors (HIFU) has been extensively described in the recent literature, including quantification by an optical method (Sonochemiluminescence SCL). The present paper provides complementary measurements through the study of acoustic streaming generated by the same kind of HIFU transducers. To this end, results of mass transfer measurements (electrodiffusional method) were compared to optical method ones (Particle Image Velocimetry). This last one was used in various configurations: with or without an electrode in the acoustic field in order to have the same perturbation of the wave propagation. Results show that the maximum velocity is not located at the focal but shifted near the transducer, and that this shift is greater for high powers. The two cavitation modes (stationary and moving bubbles) are greatly affect the hydrodynamic behavior of our sonoreactors: acoustic streaming and the fluid generated by bubble motion. The results obtained by electrochemical measurements show the same low hydrodynamic activity in the transducer vicinity, the same shift of the active focal toward the transducer, and the same absence of activity in the post-focal axial zone. The comparison with theoretical Eckart's velocities (acoustic streaming in non-cavitating media) confirms a very high activity at the ``sonochemical focal'', accounted for by wave distortion, which induced greater absorption coefficients. Moreover, the equivalent liquid velocities are one order of magnitude larger than the ones measured by Ply, confirming the enhancement of mass transfer by bubbles oscillation and collapse close to the surface, rather than from a pure streaming effect. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

DOI10.1016/j.ultsonch.2015.10.019