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Gas–Vapor Interplay in Plasmonic Bubble Shrinkage

Mikhail E. Zaytsev, Yuliang Wang, Yuhang Zhang, Guillaume Lajoinie, Xuehua Zhang, Andréa Prosperetti, Harold J. W. Zandvliet, Detlef Lohse

2020The Journal of Physical Chemistry C40 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The understanding of the shrinkage dynamics of plasmonic bubbles formed around metallic nanoparticles immersed in liquid and irradiated by a resonant light source is crucial for the usage of these bubbles in numerous applications. In this paper, we experimentally show and theoretically explain that a plasmonic bubble during its shrinkage undergoes two different phases: first, a rapid partial bubble shrinkage governed by vapor condensation and, second, a slow diffusion-controlled bubble dissolution. The history of the bubble formation plays an important role in the shrinkage dynamics during the first phase as it determines the gas-vapor ratio in the bubble composition. Higher laser powers lead to more vaporous bubbles, while longer pulses and higher dissolved air concentrations lead to more gaseous bubbles. The dynamics of the second phase barely depends on the history of bubble formation, that is, laser power and pulse duration, but strongly on the dissolved air concentration, which defines the concentration gradient at the bubble interface. Finally, for the bubble dissolution in the second phase, with decreasing dissolved air concentration, we observe a gradual transition from a R(t) ∝ (t<sub>0</sub> - t)<sup>1/3</sup> scaling law to a R(t) ∝ (t<sub>0</sub> - t)<sup>1/2</sup> scaling law where t<sub>0</sub> is the lifetime of the bubble and theoretically explain this transition.

Topics & Concepts

BubbleShrinkageDissolutionMaterials sciencePhase (matter)ScalingDiffusionChemical physicsCondensationPower lawPhase transitionChemistryThermodynamicsMechanicsComposite materialPhysicsPhysical chemistryStatisticsGeometryOrganic chemistryMathematicsUltrasound and Cavitation PhenomenaGold and Silver Nanoparticles Synthesis and ApplicationsPickering emulsions and particle stabilization