Abstract

Although microbubbles are used primarily in the medical industry as ultrasonic contrast agents, they can also be manipulated by acoustic waves for targeted drug delivery, sonothrombolysis and sonoporation. Acoustic waves can also potentially remove microbubbles from tubing systems (e.g., in hemodialysis) to prevent the negative effects associated with circulating microbubbles. A deeper understanding of the interactions between the acoustic radiation force, the microbubble and the channel wall could greatly benefit these applications. In this study, single air-filled microbubbles were injected into a flowing (polydimethylsiloxane) channel and monitored by a high-speed camera while passing through a pulsed ultrasonic wave zone (0.5 MHz). This study compared various bubble sizes, flow rates and acoustic pressure amplitudes to better understand the three physical regimes observed: free bubble translation (away from the wall); on-wall translation; and bubble-wall attachment. Comparison with a theoretical model revealed that the acoustic radiation force needs to exceed the combined repulsive forces (shear lift, wall lubrication and repulsive Van der Waal forces) for the dead state of bubble-wall attachment. The bubble dynamics revealed through this investigation provide an opportunity for efficient positioning of microbubbles in a channel flow, for either in vivo manipulation or removal in biological applications.

Full Text
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