Electrowave-
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Theory
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- The Theory of Cavitation
When a diaphragm or solid object is vibrated rapidly in a
liquid, compression and rarefaction waves propagate outward from the radiating
surface. At high enough intensity these alternating pressure and vacuum waves
cause micron-sized bubbles to form. Since the liquid temperature is below the
boiling point, there is insufficient energy to sustain the vapor phase of
these microbubbles, and as they condense back to the liquid phase the
surrounding molecules rush In to fill the void, in affect colliding and
rebounding as a shock wave, this is termed 'Cavitation'. Shock waves are
discontinuities In pressure and temperature, which in a collapsing microbubble
may be on the order of 15K - 150K psi and 5K - 10K degree C respectively,
these values are more than enough to generate ions and create free radicals.
The cavitation bubble ideally is a bubble of the vapor of the liquid being
sonicated, without any air (gasses), While the cavitating bubble contains the
gas-phase of the parent liquid (which is steam in aqueous solutions), any
other gasses dissolved or suspended as microbubbles will be forced out of the
solution and Into the cavitating bubble. When the vapor condenses to the
liquid phase, these gasses will remain behind In this bubble. The evacuated
bubble will then take in any gases of the parent liquid, and upon collapse of
the void, these out-gased materials will form visible bubbles. Continued
sonication will cause these bubbles to coalesce and rise out thus degassing
and improving cavitational intensity Solvents with high gas absorption
coefficients (Freons) will only degass to a limited extent at atmospheric
pressure and will show limited cavitational intensity. Degassing can be
achieved more quickly in aqueous solutions by adding small amounts of
surfactant, this will lower the cavitation threshold by reducing surface
tension on the cavitating bubble, but may ultimately decrease intensity by
reducing the sound propagation velocity in this solution. In general,
increasing the cavitational threshold increases intensity once cavitation is
reached, so that the more difficult It is to produce cavitation, the higher
the shock wave (intensity) will be if there is enough power available to
overcome the hydrostatic pressure.
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- Hydrostatic Pressure
The cavitation threshold is directly proportional to the
hydrostatic pressure applied to the liquid. The threshold of a liquid can be
increased If the hydrostatic pressure is maintained long enough for gas to
diffuse out of the nucleus.
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- Surface Tension
- The cavitation threshold varies inversely with surface
tension.
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- Temperature
The
cavitation threshold varies inversely with temperature. The decrease in
threshold with increasing temperature is linear, although near the boiling
point the threshold drops to zero.
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- Solid Contaminates
The cavitation threshold increases with decreasing numbers and
size of solid contaminates. Theoretically pure water would require
impractically high power levels (>20K psi) to initiate cavitation. Because
water is never really pure, less than 18 psi acoustic pressure will cavitate
most tap water.
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- Dissolved Ion Concentration
The cavitation threshold as a function of dissolved ions is not
simple or straightforward, however, in general as the concentration increases,
the threshold, relative to extremely low concentrations also increases.
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ELECTROWAVE ULTRASONICS
CORPORATION