Abstract

Acoustic bubble sizes, coalescence behavior, and sonochemical activity have been investigated in water in the presence of various electrolyte additives (KCl, HCl, and NaNO(3)) and saturating gases-helium, air, and argon. A strong correlation was identified between the bubble radius and the dissolved gas concentration in the cavitation medium. The extent of bubble coalescence for each gas was also studied in different electrolyte solutions. A causal relationship between coalescence and bubble size was inferred. Importantly, the effects of the different electrolytes could be completely attributed to their "salting out" effect on the dissolved gas, providing valuable insight into the contentious issue of ion-specific coalescence inhibition. Extrapolation of the bubble size data to conditions where bubble coalescence is minimal, i.e., zero gas concentration and zero ultrasound exposure time, yielded a bubble radius of 1.5 +/- 0.5 microm at an acoustic frequency of 515 kHz. In addition, the effects of electrolyte concentration and gas type on sonochemical activity were investigated. Sonochemical yields were increased by up to 1 order of magnitude at high electrolyte concentrations. This has been attributed to reduced gas and vapor content in the bubble core prior to collapse and a lower clustering density.

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