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Particulate Projectiles Driven by Cavitation Bubbles

Zibo Ren, Zhigang Zuo, Shengji Wu, Shuhong Liu

2022Physical Review Letters57 citationsDOI

Abstract

The removal of surface-attached particles with cavitation bubbles is usually attributed to the jetting or shear stresses when bubbles collapse. In this Letter, we report an unexpected phenomenon that millimeter-sized spherical particles made of heavy metals (e.g., stainless steel), when initially resting on a fixed rigid substrate, are suddenly accelerated like projectiles through the production of nearby laser-induced cavitation bubbles of similar sizes. We show experimentally and theoretically that the motion of a particle with radius R_{p} is determined by the maximum bubble radius R_{b,max}, the initial distance from the laser focus to the center of the particle L_{0}, and the initial azimuth angle φ_{0}. We identify two dominant regimes for the particle's sudden acceleration, namely, the unsteady liquid inertia dominated regime and the bubble contact dominated regime, determined by R_{b,max}R_{p}/L_{0}^{2}. We find the nondimensional maximum vertical displacement of the particle follows the fourth power and the square power scaling laws for respective regimes, which is consistent with the experimental results. Our findings can be applied to nonintrusive particle manipulation from solid substrates in a liquid.

Topics & Concepts

CavitationBubbleMechanicsRADIUSProjectileParticle (ecology)Materials scienceInertiaScalingPhysicsDisplacement (psychology)AzimuthBreakageMagnetosphere particle motionParticle displacementShear (geology)Classical mechanicsBreak-UpPower lawShock waveVolume (thermodynamics)Moment of inertiaVortexUltrasound and Cavitation PhenomenaErosion and Abrasive MachiningFluid Dynamics and Heat Transfer
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