A two-frequency acoustic technique for bubble resonant oscillation studies

  • Ohsaka K
  • Trinh E
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Abstract

A two-frequency acoustic apparatus has been developed to study the dynamics of a single gas or vapor bubble in water. An advantage of the apparatus is its capability of trapping a bubble by an ultrasonic standing wave while independently driving it into oscillations by a second lower frequency acoustic wave. For a preliminary application, the apparatus is used to study resonant oscillations. First, near-resonant coupling between the volume and the n=3 shape oscillation modes of air bubbles at room temperature is studied, where n is the mode number. The stability boundary, amplitude versus frequency, of the volume oscillation forms a wedge centered at the resonant frequency, which qualitatively agrees with a theoretical prediction based on a phase-space analysis. Next, the resonant volume oscillations of vapor bubbles are studied. The resonant radius of vapor bubbles at 80 °C driven at 1682 Hz is determined to be 0.7 mm, in agreement with a prediction obtained by numerical simulation.

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Ohsaka, K., & Trinh, E. H. (2000). A two-frequency acoustic technique for bubble resonant oscillation studies. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 107(3), 1346–1351. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.428421

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