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J Acoust Soc Am ; 147(2): 1207, 2020 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32113276

RESUMO

Cavitation bubble cloud formation due to the backscattering of high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) from a laser-induced bubble in various water temperatures and dissolved oxygen (DO) has been investigated. A laser-induced bubble generated near the geometrical focus of HIFU is utilized to yield intense negative pressure by the backscattering. Optical observation with a high-speed video camera and pressure measurement with a fiber-optic probe hydrophone are conducted simultaneously to understand the forming process of a bubble cloud and corresponding pressure field by the backscattering. Optical observation shows that a bubble cloud grows stepwise forming multiple layers composed of tiny cavitation bubbles, and the cavitation inception position is consistent with the local minimum pressure position simulated with the ghost fluid method. The bubble cloud grows larger in the opposite direction of HIFU propagation, and the absolute value of the cavitation inception pressure decreases with an increase in water temperature. The linear correlation between cavitation inception pressure and water temperature agrees with that given by Vlaisavljevich, Xu, Maxwell, Mancia, Zhang, Lin, Duryea, Sukovich, Hall, Johnsen, and Cain [IEEE Trans. Ultrason. Ferroelectr. Freq. Control 63, 1064-1077 (2016)]. However DO has minor dependence on the cavitation inception pressure when DO is degassed sufficiently. Furthermore, the gas nucleus size that might exist in the experiment has been estimated by using bubble dynamics.

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