Single bubble sonoluminescence

In recent years considerable attention has been directed to the phenomenon of single bubble sonoluminescence, SBSL in which a single, stable, acoustically levitated bubble is made to oscillate with sufficiently large amplitude so as to emit picosecond light pulses in each cycle of the acoustic drive...

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Main Author: Dan, Manas
Format: Others
Published: 2000
Online Access:http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/1126/1/NQ54377.pdf
Dan, Manas <http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/view/creators/Dan=3AManas=3A=3A.html> (2000) Single bubble sonoluminescence. PhD thesis, Concordia University.
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-QMG.11262013-10-22T03:41:31Z Single bubble sonoluminescence Dan, Manas In recent years considerable attention has been directed to the phenomenon of single bubble sonoluminescence, SBSL in which a single, stable, acoustically levitated bubble is made to oscillate with sufficiently large amplitude so as to emit picosecond light pulses in each cycle of the acoustic drive pressure. Remarkably, the phenomenon represents about twelve orders of magnitude of energy focusing. SBSL has been carefully and thoroughly studied in part of parameter space by previous authors. In the present work, the experimental observation of the influence of another important parameter namely the ambient pressure will be presented. It is the first complete and controlled study of the modifications of the bubble dynamics and SL emission due to the variation of the ambient pressure. It has been observed that the equilibrium radius as well as the maximum radius increase as the ambient pressure is decreased at constant driving pressure. Furthermore the expansion ratio ( R max / R min ) increases as the ambient pressure is decreased, resulting in a change in the SL radiation. The intensity of SL emission increases about seven times for only a fifteen percent decrease of ambient pressure at constant driving pressure. However, it is not possible to push SL radiation beyond a certain limit by continuously decreasing the ambient pressure. On the other hand increasing the ambient pressure decreases the equilibrium radius, as well as the expansion ratio leading to a decrease of SL intensity. Amongst the SBSL emissions the light emission has been investigated rather elaborately. The other single bubble emission is the acoustic emission, AE . Here a detailed study of AE will be presented. The AE has been measured by a calibrated needle hydrophone in different regimes of bubble motion. The hydrophone response shows a large amplitude AE pulse which corresponds to the principal collapse, along with smaller amplitude pulses which can be associated with the after bounces of the bubble just after the initial collapse. The pressure amplitudes of the main AE spike are much weaker below the sonoluminescing regime. The amplitude of the principal AE spike in the sonoluminescing regime is about 1.2 atm at 7.2 mm from the bubble. The rise time as well as the FWHM of the principal spikes and after bounces in three different regimes of bubble motion has been reported. A light scattering experiment has been carried out to study the bubble dynamics. An extremely strong correlation between the results of light scattering and those of AE has been found. 2000 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/1126/1/NQ54377.pdf Dan, Manas <http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/view/creators/Dan=3AManas=3A=3A.html> (2000) Single bubble sonoluminescence. PhD thesis, Concordia University. http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/1126/
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description In recent years considerable attention has been directed to the phenomenon of single bubble sonoluminescence, SBSL in which a single, stable, acoustically levitated bubble is made to oscillate with sufficiently large amplitude so as to emit picosecond light pulses in each cycle of the acoustic drive pressure. Remarkably, the phenomenon represents about twelve orders of magnitude of energy focusing. SBSL has been carefully and thoroughly studied in part of parameter space by previous authors. In the present work, the experimental observation of the influence of another important parameter namely the ambient pressure will be presented. It is the first complete and controlled study of the modifications of the bubble dynamics and SL emission due to the variation of the ambient pressure. It has been observed that the equilibrium radius as well as the maximum radius increase as the ambient pressure is decreased at constant driving pressure. Furthermore the expansion ratio ( R max / R min ) increases as the ambient pressure is decreased, resulting in a change in the SL radiation. The intensity of SL emission increases about seven times for only a fifteen percent decrease of ambient pressure at constant driving pressure. However, it is not possible to push SL radiation beyond a certain limit by continuously decreasing the ambient pressure. On the other hand increasing the ambient pressure decreases the equilibrium radius, as well as the expansion ratio leading to a decrease of SL intensity. Amongst the SBSL emissions the light emission has been investigated rather elaborately. The other single bubble emission is the acoustic emission, AE . Here a detailed study of AE will be presented. The AE has been measured by a calibrated needle hydrophone in different regimes of bubble motion. The hydrophone response shows a large amplitude AE pulse which corresponds to the principal collapse, along with smaller amplitude pulses which can be associated with the after bounces of the bubble just after the initial collapse. The pressure amplitudes of the main AE spike are much weaker below the sonoluminescing regime. The amplitude of the principal AE spike in the sonoluminescing regime is about 1.2 atm at 7.2 mm from the bubble. The rise time as well as the FWHM of the principal spikes and after bounces in three different regimes of bubble motion has been reported. A light scattering experiment has been carried out to study the bubble dynamics. An extremely strong correlation between the results of light scattering and those of AE has been found.
author Dan, Manas
spellingShingle Dan, Manas
Single bubble sonoluminescence
author_facet Dan, Manas
author_sort Dan, Manas
title Single bubble sonoluminescence
title_short Single bubble sonoluminescence
title_full Single bubble sonoluminescence
title_fullStr Single bubble sonoluminescence
title_full_unstemmed Single bubble sonoluminescence
title_sort single bubble sonoluminescence
publishDate 2000
url http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/1126/1/NQ54377.pdf
Dan, Manas <http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/view/creators/Dan=3AManas=3A=3A.html> (2000) Single bubble sonoluminescence. PhD thesis, Concordia University.
work_keys_str_mv AT danmanas singlebubblesonoluminescence
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