Cavitation selectively reduces the negative-pressure phase of lithotripter shock pulses

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Abstract

Measurements using a fiber-optic probe hydrophone, high-speed camera, and B-mode ultrasound showed attenuation of the trailing negative-pressure phase of a lithotripter shock pulse under conditions that favor generation of cavitation bubbles, such as in water with a high content of dissolved gas or at high pulse repetition rate where more cavitation nuclei persisted between pulses. This cavitation-mediated attenuation of the acoustic pulse was also observed to increase with increasing amplitude of source discharge potential, such that the negative-pressure phase of the pulse can remain fixed in amplitude even with increasing source discharge potential. © 2005 Acoustical Society of America.

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Pishchalnikov, Y. A., Sapozhnikov, O. A., Bailey, M. R., Pishchalnikova, I. V., Williams, J. C., & McAteer, J. A. (2005). Cavitation selectively reduces the negative-pressure phase of lithotripter shock pulses. Acoustic Research Letters Online, 6(4), 280–286. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.2127115

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